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VYOOS EDITORIAL
Sometimes, the best decisions in law are innovative moments of colour splashed on grey areas of inefficacy.

The ideal judicial system is one which protects both the citizens of a community and the rights of those citizens. But the law can be a platform of social justice made of quicksand. It can never cover all eventualities, and if people try to make it do so, the law can be an ass.

An example surfaced in San Juan del Rio in Queretaro state, central Mexico, late last week, when police caught a 13-year-old boy spray-painting graffiti tags on municipal property. They took the boy to a municipal official whose job it was to deal with petty offences.


The official decided that, in this case, a lesson about vandalism and the sanctity of other people's property might be learned if he spray-painted the boy's buttocks.

So he did.

The San Juan del Rio mayor promptly fired the official, saying he should have played it by the book and informed the boy's parents, who would then be responsible for paying for the graffiti to be removed.

In today's carefully sanitised and correct world, the mayor was right. Informing the parents, and forcing them to pay for the damage, was the legally mandated and sensible thing to do. It is interesting, however, that this action would in no obvious way have given the boy a demonstration of why his behaviour was considered unacceptable.

To be fair, the official went too far. You can not pull down the pants of anyone, let alone a 13-year-old, and spray-paint their bum to make a point. But perhaps the point could have been made anecdotally — imagine how you would feel if I violated your property, to wit, your bottom, by taking this spray can and ...


If, next weekend, the 13-year-old boy decides after consideration that he is no longer inclined to spray-paint graffiti on municipal property, do you think we will have the mayor, who still has his job, to thank, or the official who no longer has his job?


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Today's news: Fare's fair

January 14th 2010 02:52
new york cabs
There are an estimated 13,000 taxis in New York city
It's an ongoing saga: person leaves valuables in New York cab, cab driver finds person and returns valuables.

The latest involves a 72-year-old Italian tourist named Felicia Lettieri, a young taxi driver named Mukul Asadujjaman, and a large purse containing about US$21,000 in cash, jewellery worth several thousand dollars and some passports.

Asadujjaman, who is a native of Bangladesh and is studying medicine in the US when he isn't driving taxis, found the purse on the back seat of his cab, and inside it found an address for the Italian tourist group of which Ms Lettieri was part. Asadujjaman borrowed a friend's car and drove about 80 kilometres to the address, only to find no-one there. He left his phone number, drove home, was contacted, and drove all the way back to return the purse.

He then declined to accept a reward, saying his Muslim faith prevented him doing so.

In 2007, Osman Chowdhury, another Bangladeshi driving cabs in the US, returned a bag containing diamond rings worth $500,000. He had to track down the owner in Texas.

And in 2008 Mohamed Khalil, of Egyptian background, dropped a passenger at Newark Liberty Airport, and later discovered the passenger had left a violin in the cab. When he tracked down the owner and returned the violin, he learned that the man was Philippe Quint, a world-famous violinist, and that the violin was a Stradivarius, made in 1723, and worth about US$4 million.

As well as a cash reward, Quint gave Khalil a 30-minute private performance and then invited his entire family to Quint's next performance, which was at Carnegie Hall.


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How cool is this?

December 22nd 2009 20:09
davidoff cool
Adam Ferrier has a bright future in his chosen field of consumer psychology, whatever that is.

Ferrier, whom we should call Dr Ferrier because he has just completed a PhD at the University of Western Sydney, chose as his thesis subject something far more cool than the usual. His study was: what makes people cool.

He gets your attention immediately by starting with a few things which do not make you cool: an iMac, a pair of Ray-Bans and a flash car.

Oh, wait, the consumer psychology bit is starting to make sense.

Dr Ferrier, who studied the traits of cool people to determine what makes people cool, decided that it is intangible attributes rather than expensive accessories which create the elusive aura coolness.

He distilled his findings into five factors that determine how cool an individual is: self-belief and confidence; defying convention; understated achievement; caring for others; and connectivity.

"The good news is that anyone can become cool," he said. ``It's a bit of myth that you can't become cool — you can. But you're certainly not going to get cool through consumption."

Now that you know the secret, however, there is bad news — a self-awareness of how cool you are won't make you any cooler.

``The other myth is that if you know you are not cool, that somehow makes you cool,'' Dr Ferrier said. ``Just by knowing that you're not cool doesn't change anything.''

The cool doctor has created a Facebook application which measures coolness at apps.facebook.com/dr_cool
Source: mX; image: davidoff


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Opinions can not be trusted

August 14th 2009 04:28
surveys

Richard Smith, a British doctor and director of the Ovations program which fights chronic disease in the developing world, recently had breakfast in Bangladesh with an unnamed economics professor from Harvard University.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Do single women prefer attached men?

August 13th 2009 00:51
single women

The question has been around ever since Eve stole Adam from his first wife, but has recently been given an entertaining new airing by writer Justin Prugh. He uses Eve as an example too, citing her biting of the forbidden apple as evidence that all women get excited by what they can't have.

[ Click here to read more ]
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archbishop vincent nichols

Internet social networking sites which promote themselves as communities are in fact undermining community life. So are texting and emails.

[ Click here to read more ]
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A sore bum and a big heart

July 24th 2009 00:42
jenie butler

Jenie Butler, a young clinical nurse specialist, expects a sore bum. That's what happens, she figures, if you decide to ride a bicycle across Australia's endless Nullarbor Plain.

[ Click here to read more ]
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multitasking

Women can't focus on the task at hand, say men. Men can't multi-task, say women.

[ Click here to read more ]
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How much should fans care?

June 19th 2009 04:28
joanna trollope

Is it possible to be a fan without reacting personally sometimes to things our favourite singers or actors or writers do?

[ Click here to read more ]
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Money isn't everything

April 15th 2009 11:47
money happiness

They were a young couple determined to live a better life than the tough rural existence their parents had known. It was January 2007 and Cristina Simoes, then 20, and Luis Ribeiro, then 23, of Portugal, were planning a good life together.

[ Click here to read more ]
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The public face of breastfeeding

March 11th 2009 20:52
breastfeeding twins

I gained some notoriety in the mid-1990s by inviting every breastfeeding woman in Hong Kong to feed their babies in full view of Lieutenant-Colonel Pompous Choleric.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Living with intolerance

March 5th 2009 05:38
There can be little point in railing against racism. Pointing out that racism is a foolish prejudice born of ignorance is good, indeed important, but the degree to which some people get stirred is unproductive. They affect no-one except themselves, and they help foster the social polarisation which the Pauline Hansons of this world exploit.

Few people are completely tolerant. Devout Buddhists love and revere all living creatures. At the other end of the spectrum, Pauline Hanson, if she is honest, probably hates everyone who doesn't have bright orange hair, green eyes and a slightly confused stare


[ Click here to read more ]
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Love is in the news

February 12th 2009 22:14
venus de milo goddess love beauty

And here is today's news about love.

[ Click here to read more ]
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Phelps and that sinking feeling

February 9th 2009 00:48
michael phelps bong
Michael Phelps: no bong here

The Michael Phelps bong saga has me ready to commit random acts of mindless profanity.

[ Click here to read more ]
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