海角大神

Good Reads: From innovation, to Nigeria鈥檚 terrorist struggle, to hot peppers

This week's roundup of Good Reads includes ranking the greatest innovations in modern life, Boko Haram's toll on Nigeria, a look at the patrol of the South China Sea, growing the world's hottest chili, and Kyrgyzstan's most-wanted man.

|
AP/FILE
Guglielmo Marconi, the Italian inventor of the radio, tested an early product in 1901.

What innovation since the wheel 鈥 created almost 6,000 years ago 鈥 has done the most to shape modern life? Maybe your list would include electricity, or the automobile. But what about sanitation systems, or cement?

In offers 50 answers, which he compiled with input from 12 engineers, technology historians, scientists, and entrepreneurs each giving 25 suggestions. Broad categories of innovation emerged, including innovations that expand human intellect (paper or photography), extend life (penicillin), and allow real-time communication (the Internet) and organizational breakthroughs (the Gregorian calendar and alphabetization), among others.

A majority of the contributors (10 of 12) suggested the top innovation on the list (the printing press), but the rankings are sure to stir debate about the sources and effects of innovation. For Mr. Fallows, he would rank innovations based on which one he would miss more if it didn鈥檛 exist. Anesthesia (No. 46 in the list) would be in his top 10, at least higher than the personal computer, which is No. 16.

Boko Haram鈥檚 toll on Nigeria

Reporting for National Geographic, James Verini paints a grisly picture of how Boko Haram 鈥 an Al Qaeda-linked terrorist group 鈥 has wreaked havoc in northern Nigeria, a region already struggling with ethnic and religious violence.

Mr. Verini says that Boko Haram鈥檚 gravest toll on Nigeria is existential: 鈥淏oko Haram has become a kind of national synonym for fear, a repository for Nigerians鈥 worst anxieties about their society and where it鈥檚 headed,鈥 he writes. 鈥淭hose anxieties touch on the most elemental aspects of Nigerian life 鈥 ethnicity, religion, regional inequities, the legacy of colonialism 鈥 and not least is the anxiety that Nigerian leaders are wholly incapable of facing this insurgency, indeed unwilling to face it, much less the social fissures beneath it.鈥

South China Sea patrol

Almost one-quarter of the $5.3 trillion in global trade that moves through the South China Sea reaches US ports. With several countries 鈥 the Philippines, Malaysia, Brunei, Taiwan, and China, among others 鈥 claiming ownership of the water, islands, reefs, or shoals in the area, the United States walks a fine diplomatic line.

鈥淭he Americans pointedly refuse to take sides in the sovereignty disputes,鈥 Jeff Himmelman writes in The New York Times Magazine. 鈥淏ut China鈥檚 behavior as it becomes more powerful, along with freedom of navigation and control over South China Sea shipping lanes, will be among the major global political issues of the 21st century.鈥

The claims to the territory are as historically and morally complex as the Middle East, he writes. And with China wielding more of its physical force, smaller countries are clinging to whatever threadbare islands and reefs they can. Mr. Himmelman describes eight Filipino marines posted to a rusty, degenerating boat (the Sierra Madre) that ran aground on the Ayungin reef in the Spratly Islands in 1999. From this perch, the men track how many Chinese boats are in the area and what they are doing. The desolate post is the only deterrence to China claiming the territory as its own.

The world鈥檚 hottest chili

The hottest chili in the world, according to Guinness World Records, is the Trinidad Scorpion Butch T, measuring 1,463,700 Scoville heat units (based on the food pungency rating system developed by pharmacist Wilbur Scoville in 1912). But not every 鈥渃hilihead鈥 agrees with the assessment, writes .

Exploring the subculture of 鈥渟uperhots鈥 鈥 chilies that surpass 500,000 SHUs 鈥 Ms. Collins interviews those who taste and cultivate these chilies in the cutthroat endeavor to create even hotter ones. (For reference: a habanero measures 300,000 SHUs.) They create superhots with names like Carolina Reaper, Armageddon, Naga Morich, and Brain Strain.

鈥淎s a leisure activity, superhots offer some of the pleasures of mild drugs and extreme sports without requiring one to break the law or work out,鈥 she writes.

鈥淭hey are near-death experiences in a bowl of guacamole.鈥

Kyrgyzstan鈥檚 鈥榤ost wanted鈥

Eugene Gourevitch is a wanted man in three countries: Kyrgyzstan wants him on charges of fraud and embezzlement, Italy for money laundering, and the US for extortion.

In traces Mr. Gourevitch鈥檚 journey starting with his job as an investment banker in Kyrgyzstan. After the fall of President Kurmanbek Bakiyev鈥檚 regime in 2010, he fled to Belarus to avoid prosecution. Because of self-interest, or perhaps a higher moral calling, Gourevitch became an FBI informant on the illegal financial practices of Maxim Bakiyev, the son of Kyrgyzstan鈥檚 ousted president, in which he had a role. He is a new breed of post-Soviet antihero, writes Mr. Shishkin.

鈥淎t its core, his story shows how business is done in many corners of the post-Soviet world[,] where rapacious hangers-on seek access to global finance and make use of intermediaries and offshore companies. Gourevitch himself says he鈥檚 been turned into a scapegoat for sins not of his own making...,鈥 he writes.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
Real news can be honest, hopeful, credible, constructive.
海角大神 was founded in 1908 to lift the standard of journalism and uplift humanity. We aim to 鈥渟peak the truth in love.鈥 Our goal is not to tell you what to think, but to give you the essential knowledge and understanding to come to your own intelligent conclusions. Join us in this mission by subscribing.
QR Code to Good Reads: From innovation, to Nigeria鈥檚 terrorist struggle, to hot peppers
Read this article in
/World/Global-News/2013/1111/Good-Reads-From-innovation-to-Nigeria-s-terrorist-struggle-to-hot-peppers
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe