1for2: 1 School for 2 Opposing Political Groups' Children

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How can one school help solve a conflict?

Extended summary

Schools between "self-described" states

Why Cyprus first?

Videos of conflicts below

Israel - Pales. Authority

N. Korea - S. Korea

Syria - Israel - Jordan

Pakistan - India

Schools for intra-state conflicts

Videos of these conflicts

N. Ireland (Belfast)

Iraq (Baghdad)

Lebanon (Beirut)

Afghanistan (Kabul)

Nepal (Kathmandu)

For the best resolution results

Why integrating the school is not enough

Video clips of CL

Cypriot School location

Sample drawing

Admissions formula for influential two-year-olds

Visuals: Cog. diss. at TCS

Analogy: A watershed and a dying fruit tree

Evaluating TCS

Fast rail as a school bus

Estimated cost

Videos: Non-maglev

Palestinian rail

Maglev /Non-maglev?

Videos: Maglev rail

Common questions

Maglev or conventional high-speed rail?


Maglev trains are another possibility for The Korean and Abrahamic Schools.  The only train with regular passenger service so far is the Shanghai maglev, but others are being proposed in Germany, the United Kingdom, Japan, and elsewhere in China, such as between Shanghai and the city of Hangzhou.  The proposed UK line is the longest one on any drawing board; it would stretch from London to Edinburgh and Glascow.  The existing Shanghai train reaches 430 km/hr, the top speed on a daily basis for the proposed Shanghai-Hangzhou line would be 450 km/hr, and the experimental Japanese maglev train has attained a maximum speed of 581 km/hr.

Unlike conventional high-speed trains, maglev trains utilize electromagnetic force.  They are much faster but their costs are higher, so it is unclear whether this greater cost would be offset by the time-saving benefits of a quicker trip. 
For a good analysis of the Shanghai maglev's costs and benefits, from the perspective of a layperson, click here. 


Next page: Youtube videos of maglev passenger trains