The German Focus magazine reported yesterday about a new technology that means that clothes made with it no longer would have to be washed – they clean themselves.
It sounds like science fiction – remember the jacket in Back to the Future II that dried itself?
Or maybe it’s April Fool’s Day and I didn’t notice?
No – it’s serious. The textiles are treated with titanium dioxide, which reacts with sunlight to set off nanoparticles that remove dirt and bad smells, and this has more far-reaching implications that just not having to wash your clothes.
Firstly, the titanium dioxide is considered non-toxic to the environment, and secondly, by not having to wash the clothes the amount of detergent released into the water supply would be reduced.
Great news for the fashion industry and the environment – not so good news for makers of washing machines and washing powder!
Clothes that clean themselves
The Archibishop of Canterbury and his can of worms
This afternoon I read the suggestion from the Archbishop of Canterbury that Sharia (Islamic) law should be implemented in the UK. To be precise, he said that it “seems unavoidable“.
I made my thoughts then and was going to blog about it this evening, but a few thousand people got there first on the BBC news forum. Currently they have received nearly 9000 comments, with just over 2500 published and over 6000 waiting to be moderated!
I think there are a lot of conflicting ideas going on here. Let’s try and sort them out:
Tolerance of other religious faiths
I think that the UK is one of the most tolerant societies in Europe, because in my opinion it doesn’t just make an effort to bring everyone together – it really manages it as well.
If a religious minority has problems practising their faith, then the UK authorities usually find a way of making it possible. A good example of these is the exemption on wearing motorcycle helmets for the Sikh community.
Prohibition to suit other faiths
This I find more difficult. It is one thing to allow something to a particular group, but quite another to ban it in a whole country to keep that group happy. Stopping stories with pigs being told in schools, for example, is taking this too far in my opinion. It would be better to tell the story and use the opportunity to discuss the different religious positions on pigs.
I personally encountered a similar demand at a Scout Jamboree once. A meeting for Scout Leaders was to be held in a particular tent. The only problem was, that this tent was the Leaders’ bar in the evening, meaning that on a camp site for over 30,000 people, this was the only tent to serve alcohol and only then after 8pm to people over 18. This was still enough for one country to request that the meeting (to be held at 3pm) be relocated – not on religious grounds, but because their country’s Scout rules did not allow alcohol at camp.
Making laws optional
In the current case, it seems to be suggested that Muslims in the UK should have the choice of being tried by UK or Sharia law. I think this has wide-ranging implications, because it assumes that both parties would accept this, which I am sure would not always be the case.
But since when does the person being tried get to chose under which law they are in court? I live in Germany and have to abide by the laws of this country – I cannot decide to live by the laws of the UK.
Some of the comments that followed on the BBC forum are very direct, along the lines of “if someone wants to live by Sharia law then they should move to a country that has it”. I can follow these sentiments up to a point. Many people who might like to live by that law still prefer to live in the UK.
How to get round the problem
I think the best thing to do is to separate laws and principles, as it is quite possible to live be a set of principles within the laws of another country. I live by the British principles that I was brought up with, but I live under German law. Surely this must be possible to apply to the situation for Muslims in the UK?
To be quite honest, I think a lot of the comments are right to point out that this may not have been such a problem as it is being made out to be, and that the Archbishop should have left the topic well alone.
Good bye Grange Hill
When I think back to my childhood in England there are a small number of television programmes that I particularly remember.
One of these is “Grange Hill”, which I was surprised to learn today is still going after 30 years – well, just about as it has now been cancelled.
I belong to the generation that maybe just missed the first couple of seasons, but were otherwise with it from the end of the 1970s whilst still at primary school ourselves, progressing through the 1980s and finally leaving school at the beginning of the 1990s.
I can remember certain characters and issues, maybe not always the ones quoted in the media today, and I definitely remember the theme tune and the original opening titles (sausage included).
So whilst I may not have given it any further thought in the past years, I reminisced today by watching clips on-line, including said titles, and reading some interviews with the actors of bygone years.
Yes, that programme was a part of my tea-time viewing, and it’s a nice thought that generations after me enjoyed it as well.
That being the case, it’s a shame that it has to end.
