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Recent Posts
- Reading Nov-Dec 2025 and Jan 2026
- AI as an existential threat – Kevane preliminary draft
- “What can it do?” A living list of computational problems that deep learning/AI/neural nets can or seems likely to “do” (at varying cost and efficacy)
- Reading August-September 2025
- The typical popular sci-fi version of AI posing an existential risk?
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Categories
Friends of African Village Libraries (I post regularly here)- Photos from Gowrie Kunkua community library during the night session, Ghana
- Sumbrungu Community Library nighttime reading
- Résumé du livre Une grande mère criminelle
- Organisation d’une séance de discussion autour d’un livre à la bibliothèque de Dimikuy
- Librarians of Tuy monthly meeting January 2026, Burkina Faso
- Impressions sur la production de livres CMH au Burkina Faso
- Compte rendu de la première rencontre des gérants de la zone du Tuy
- Science fiction books for libraries in Burkina Faso and Ghana
- Animation d’une séance de lecture à la bibliothèque de Dimikuy
- Nyariga Community Library in Ghana, photos January 2026
Category Archives: Burkina Faso
Who is killing the donkeys of West Africa for their skins?
The prices of donkey skins have soared. Nobody is quite sure. But China seems to be the destination for the skins. A tulip market? Increased real as opposed to speculative demand? Aéroport international de Ouagadougou, début février 2016. Des dizaines … Continue reading
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It just doesn’t seem like a good use of the word concurrence
Probably Trump meant “consideration” but something in him said “use a bigger word”… By the way, the Trans-Pacific, if you look at the TPP, a total disaster, which, by the way, Marco is in favor of, they need — it … Continue reading
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Nice article by Jeffrey Gettleman on possible corruption in Kenya
Suggests just how easy it is to make a ton of money through corruption when you have a billion dollar company basically wanting to “give” you $500,000 with no oversight. In a contract signed several years ago, Nike agreed to … Continue reading
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Light reading these last couple weeks: Faber and Mitchell
I read Michael Faber’s The Book of Strange New Things. Definitely compares nicely to Mary Doria Russell’s The Sparrow, if you have read that. A missionary travel to Oasis, where the Oasans are a remarkably simply, vulnerable, Jesus-loving agrarian society. … Continue reading
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Credit Suisse C.E.O. Asks for a Cut in His Bonus
Tidjane Thiam, the chief executive of Credit Suisse, has asked the company’s board to reduce his bonus, days after the Swiss bank reported a multibillion-dollar loss in the fourth quarter. “I have asked the board of directors for a significant … Continue reading
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Not the new Linda Rondstadt, but she (Lindi Ortega) is pretty good
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Even when you are en economist, you can want to be an astronaut
The amazing astronaut is Sunita Williams.
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The Race for Space by British alternative group Public Service Broadcasting
My brother gave me this CD for Christmas. It makes an addictive present, and you will never, ever, forget Yuri Gagarin, Alexei Leonov (did you even know he was the first person to walk in space?) and the three astronauts … Continue reading
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Noah Smith asks why many economists still advocate for free trade
Smith accuses economists of being blithely callous. But he seems unable to appreciate how narrow-minded his own “attack on economists” is, because by his notion of what is fair and just only Americans matter. Who cares what happens to the … Continue reading
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Anthony Bernier challenges library youth services to be more international-oriented, in in VOYA
Nice perspective from Anthony! I come not to praise the superiority we feel about library service in the United States, but to bury it. This issue of VOYA [February 2016] concentrates on how technology continues to move evermore rapidly to … Continue reading
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Recent light reading
Slade House, by David Mitchell. A haunted house horror story, sort of. More interesting as a technical challenge: create a vivid character and virtual reality, one for each decade, from 1970 to present. In some ways Dorian Gray, and the … Continue reading
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Possible longer term effects of Splendid attack
It looks like the Splendid Hotel and Cafe Cappuccino attack of January 15 2016 evening in Ouagadougou was an AQIM-organized attack, with the possibly declared purpose of attacking France, which leads operations against AQIM in northern Africa and the Sahel. … Continue reading
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Le Burkina Faso de Roch Kaboré et Salif Diallo
As usual, nice summary commentary from Jean-Pierre Bejot: Discours très généraliste. En cette journée qui vient clore « la glorieuse page de l’histoire récente de notre peuple », Roch Kaboré s’est bien gardé d’évoquer quoi ou qui que ce soit … Continue reading
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Terrorists, militias, ranchers
I agree with Tyler Cowen that this summary is extremely helpful. Unfortunately the media is not going to let this story go unless something more serious happens (like a war between Saudi Arabia and Iran? No this story would probably … Continue reading
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The Force Awakens – Who cares? Not me.
The trouble with fans and reviews like this one is that they are dreadfully wrong about one important point. It is a movie for 12 year old children. Land Before Time also created a “mythology”… Doc? The Mysterious Beyond? But … Continue reading
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Great commentary by Alex Thurston on Mali
Returning to Mali, how are policymakers supposed to act on Elischer’s analysis? The “international community” is supposed to “note” the “destabilizing” influence of Dicko and other Salafis in southern Mali. Then what? Demand that Malian politicians repudiate Dicko? Seek to … Continue reading
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The Fishermen by Chigozie Obioma
The Fishermen by Chigozie Obioma is a harrowing novel set in the 1990s. A middle-class professional family in the town of Akure unravels, with brother killing brother. The novel works as a metaphor for Nigeria, as a classic-style tragedy, and … Continue reading
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Bill Sundstrom pokes the Pope on cap and trade… will he respond?
Pope Francis didn’t win many friends among mainstream climate economists when his recent environmental encyclical Laudato Si’ condemned the notion of buying and selling carbon credits, suggesting that it could “lead to a new form of speculation which would not … Continue reading
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Puerto Rico debt saga continues to unfold, slowly
Puerto Rico met its deadline for repaying $354 million in debt, the island’s development bank announced Tuesday, avoiding what some feared would be its first major default. But it was unclear how long the payments would continue or whether the … Continue reading
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What does the election of Roch Marc Christian Kaboré to be President of Burkina Faso mean?
I love it when pundits write opinion pieces purporting to “explain” what something means, when they often have little or no idea, or they just copy what everyone else says. So in that spirit, I offer three “anti- it means … Continue reading
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