The BBC reports:
The clock on the facade of the building housing the Bolivian congress in La Paz has been reversed. Its hands turn left and the numbers have been inverted to go from one to 12 anti-clockwise.
Bolivian Foreign Minister David Choquehuanca dubbed it the "clock of the south". He said the change had been made to get Bolivians to treasure their heritage and show them that they could question established norms and think creatively.
"Who says that the clock always has to turn one way? Why do we always have to obey? Why can't we be creative?", he asked at a news conference on Tuesday. "We don't have to complicate matters, we just have to be conscious that we live in the south, not in the north," Mr Choquehuanca added.
(Score: 2) by zafiro17 on Friday June 27 2014, @01:02PM
Good for them - everybody should be ready to put on their iconoclast hat and swing once in a while. I salute these guys for their willingness to think twice about established norms.
But if they ever start top-posting on Usenet they are going to get themselves flamed off the globe by a high energy satellite-mounted laser. Usenet: don't mess with it, punk.
Dad always thought laughter was the best medicine, which I guess is why several of us died of tuberculosis - Jack Handey
(Score: 2) by Hairyfeet on Friday June 27 2014, @05:16PM
Well since I've never been to Bolivia I can't answer this question (nor be arsed to look it up as I have a skull thumper) so it seems obvious to me whether this is dumb or not can be answered by one simple question...do sundials there go counter clockwise? Because THAT is why clocks go what is now known as clockwise, its based on sundials in ancient history. Knowing this always made me ponder...if waterclocks would have kept up their popularity would our clocks and watches today go up and down instead of round and round?
ACs are never seen so don't bother. Always ready to show SJWs for the racists they are.
(Score: 2) by urza9814 on Monday June 30 2014, @03:42PM
Yeah, clocks are based on *northern* sundials, as a southern sundial would indeed move counter-clockwise.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sundial#Sundials_in_the_Southern_Hemisphere [wikipedia.org]