Green property: the house that costs £60 a year to heat

Adam Edwards meets a man on an eco-mission that everyone can join. By Adam Edwards Almost tropical: Mike Hillard in his green low-energy home near Stroud, which even at -8C outside needs little heating Photo: ANDREW CROWLEY Mike Hillard has a banana tree growing in his conservatory. It’s about 18ft high and this summer he hopes it will provide him with enough fruit for a supersize Banoffi pie, a few fritters and a couple of milk shakes. But the tree is there for swanky reasons as much as for sustenance. This is because Mike has built and now lives in … Continue reading Green property: the house that costs £60 a year to heat

An introduction to the poetry of Robert Burns

Don Paterson The Guardian, Portrait of Robert Burns (1759-1796), Scottish poet. Photograph: Getty Images/Time & Life Pictures Robert Burns was born in Alloway in Ayrshire, and died in Dumfries. He had watched his father worn down by authority, and worn out by labour. This radicalised him, and turned Burns into an enemy of all enemies of freedom and humanity. Such egalitarian ideals got him into trouble: he was excited by outbreak of revolution in France, and his indiscreet support nearly lost him his job as an exciseman. Burns’ songs enjoy an international popularity, but what’s often admired in his poetry … Continue reading An introduction to the poetry of Robert Burns

How best to forecast terror?

The terror threat to the UK has been raised from ‘substantial’ to ‘severe’, but a numerical prediction would be more valuable Dylan Evans guardian.co.uk, The UK terror threat has been raised from “substantial” to “severe” – but what on earth does this actually mean? The official explanation – that an attack is now “highly likely” rather than merely “a strong possibility” – does not make things any clearer. Given that the threat level had stood at substantial since last July until this weekend’s announcement, and there were no terrorist attacks during this period, we can infer that “a strong possibility” … Continue reading How best to forecast terror?

How to celebrate Egypt’s Pig Day

Today Egyptians are enjoying an enforced holiday in honour of their national police – but revellers should beware Jack Shenker guardian.co.uk, ‘At the service of the people’ … Egyptian riot police charge demonstrators in Cairo in 2003. Photograph: Marwan Naamani/EPA Happy Police Day! For those not lucky enough to be familiar with Egypt’s annual jamboree celebrating the world’s most prestigious cops, concerned Egyptian citizens – eager to ensure you make the most of this public holiday – have issued a checklist of essential Police Day merchandise that every reveller should be sporting. 1. A history lesson – It’s important to … Continue reading How to celebrate Egypt’s Pig Day

Israel’s NGO crackdown spells trouble

The Israeli government’s restrictions on the movement of NGO workers will impose more hardship on beleaguered Palestinians Seth Freedman guardian.co.uk, Last week saw the latest move in the Israeli government’s clampdown on those working in solidarity with the Palestinians in the Occupied Territories. Ending a decades-old policy of granting work visas to employees of NGOs operating in the region, Israeli officials are now issuing NGO workers with tourist visas instead, prohibiting them from working in areas under Israeli jurisdiction, including Area C (which makes up 60% of the West Bank) and all of East Jerusalem. Many NGOs maintain a presence … Continue reading Israel’s NGO crackdown spells trouble

Gatwick policing looks ugly

After a flight was delayed, passengers reported shockingly aggressive policing. Are the public just scum to officers? There are two sides of the story at Gatwick on 10 January – the accounts from passengers who say that they were aggressively cleared from a departure gate late at night by a score or more of armed police after their Ryanair flight failed to appear, and the explanation given by Sussex police. First the passengers’ story: there were 120 mostly English and Spanish citizens booked on the 9pm flight to Madrid from London on Sunday 10 January. After a delay of 75 … Continue reading Gatwick policing looks ugly

So, there…

Shahzad Chaudhry Pakistan has had to reposition some of its troops to take on operations on the western border; India found some space to show its relative strength and ended up trading fire across the LoC, which hitherto was peaceful under an unwritten understanding to observe a total ceasefire on both sides There have been four different spins to the IPL episode. Preity Zinta and Ness Wadia’s — heading one of the franchises of the BCCI’s cricketing circus — perhaps was the most diplomatic: availability and visa facilitation of the Pakistani participants was uncertain and hence involved some risk in … Continue reading So, there…

The joy of next

Daniel Gilbert If you were asked to name the human brain’s greatest achievement, you might think first of the impressive artefacts it has produced — the Great Pyramid of Giza, the International Space Station, or perhaps the Golden Gate Bridge. These are great achievements indeed, and our brains deserve their very own ticker-tape parade for producing them. But they are not the greatest. A sophisticated machine could design and build any one of these things because designing and building require knowledge, logic, and patience, of which sophisticated machines have plenty. In fact, there is really only one achievement so remarkable … Continue reading The joy of next

Doctors are not murderers

Dr Syed Mansoor Hussain When I worked in the US, hospitals were strictly monitored and were expected to provide all the basic requirements of a cardiac facility. And more importantly, not only were my results monitored closely by the hospital but also by the state The recent legal furore against prominent physicians from some of the better known private hospitals in Lahore seems to be simmering down. The law will eventually take its course but for a change, justice delayed in this case will not be justice denied. Medical malpractice is not murder. Negligence yes, even extreme in its consequences, … Continue reading Doctors are not murderers

Shattering the myths that empower Mullahs

Shattering the myths — I —Elf Habib Punishments like stoning or boiling to death, burning at the stake, feeding to hungry lions, castration, amputation, even flogging and public executions have gradually been excised from the western statute books Some strange notions and irrationalities ingrained in several Muslim circles have unfortunately congealed into inveterate beliefs and phenomena and have become too infectious, disastrous and obstructive to the growth of modern, interactive, enlightened, pluralistic and peaceful societies. During the British sway in the subcontinent, for instance, religious lobbies denounced the acquisition of the English language and political institutions. Sir Syed’s struggle for … Continue reading Shattering the myths that empower Mullahs