Most Popular
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Dongduk Women’s University halts coeducation talks
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Defense ministry denies special treatment for BTS’ V amid phone use allegations
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Russia sent 'anti-air' missiles to Pyongyang, Yoon's aide says
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OpenAI in talks with Samsung to power AI features, report says
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Two jailed for forcing disabled teens into prostitution
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South Korean military plans to launch new division for future warfare
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Gold bars and cash bundles; authorities confiscate millions from tax dodgers
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Trump picks ex-N. Korea policy official as his principal deputy national security adviser
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Kia EV9 GT marks world debut at LA Motor Show
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Teen smoking, drinking decline, while mental health, dietary habits worsen
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[Shang-Jin Wei] Liz Truss vs. the Bank of England
Following a week of financial-market turbulence, UK Prime Minister Liz Truss was forced to scrap her plan to abolish the 45 percent top income tax rate for high earners. This U-turn, an attempt to counter a stunning market sell-off that caused the pound to crash and saw the Bank of England launch a massive bond-buying program to prevent “material risk to UK financial stability,” is a necessary first step toward stabilizing the economy. But unless Truss reverses more of the tax cuts
ViewpointsOct. 11, 2022
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[Editorial] Green pandemonium
The previous administration under President Moon Jae-in pushed an unreasonable nuclear phase-out policy and expanded renewable energy hastily. Irregularities suspected of being committed under the pretext of environment-friendliness are now coming into light. According to Yun Chang-hyun, a National Assembly member of the ruling People Power Party, the Office for Government Policy Coordination of Prime Minister’s Secretariat under the Moon administration probed solar and other power generat
EditorialOct. 11, 2022
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[Peter Singer] Research ethics and nonhuman subjects
In August, Springer Nature, the publisher of 3,000 academic journals, including the Nature portfolio of the world’s most influential science journals, announced new ethics guidance for its editors, addressing the balance between academic freedom and the risk that publication of some research will harm specific groups of humans. The guidance also mentions, though much more briefly, research using animals. There are long-established guidelines proscribing the publication of articles based on
ViewpointsOct. 11, 2022
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[Elizabeth Shackelford] The hope and warning of Iran’s protests
The death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in Iranian police custody last month sparked the country’s biggest protests in years. Under the rallying cry, “Woman, Life, Freedom,” protesters have ground dozens of cities to a halt. The response from Iran’s authoritarian regime has been swift and harsh, with security forces opening fire on crowds and killing dozens. Though the protesters remain undeterred, it’s hard to imagine how they prevail. When the regime in power has a m
ViewpointsOct. 10, 2022
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[Editorial] Perfect storm
South Korea’s economic indicators keep turning red but policymakers have been slow to come up with a convincing strategy to tackle the mounting problems. Instead, they are repeating the same mantra that the country is outside the approaching storm. Optimists, including government officials, hold the view that the country is not engulfed by a fiery economic crisis -- at least for now -- and is relatively well prepared for possible shocks. But pessimists argue that there are plenty of signs
EditorialOct. 10, 2022
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[Akira Kawamoto] Kishida must take bolder steps to regain public trust
No one could have foreseen that Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida’s popularity would nosedive so soon after the Liberal Democratic Party triumphed in July’s election to the Upper House of the Japanese Diet. Until recently, Kishida’s government received consistently high approval ratings. But the LDP’s links to a controversial religious group, along with the costly state funeral of former Prime Minister Abe Shinzō, have shaken Kishida’s political base, endangerin
ViewpointsOct. 10, 2022
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[Robert J. Fouser] English and linguistic ‘superdiversity’
My first trip to Europe in three years offered renewed insight into language complexities of the early 21st century. Despite a pause in mass tourism during the COVID-19 pandemic, English continues to expand. At the same time, migration is creating “superdiverse” linguistic spaces in cities. At a conference in Leuven, Belgium, a Belgian professor casually mentioned that English was becoming a neutral common language that helps the country bridge the sharp division between Dutch- and F
ViewpointsOct. 7, 2022
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[Editorial] Substantial response
The South Korean military and United States Forces Korea each fired two ground-to-ground missiles into the eastern sea of South Korea on Wednesday, a day after North Korea launched an intermediate-range ballistic missile. The Army Tactical Missile System missiles hit mock targets precisely and the drill demonstrated the two allies’ combined deterrence capability, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said. On Tuesday, about 10 hours after the North fired the IRBM, the air forces of Sou
EditorialOct. 7, 2022
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[Martin Schram] When Bill covered up for Boris
The world has watched in shock, outrage and disbelief, as Russia’s President Vladimir Putin brazenly invaded his sovereign neighbor Ukraine -- in a full-speed-ahead aggression that ended up with Putin cornering himself and entrapping much of the world in the mess he single-handedly created. Then he made his godawful situation much worse by threatening the world with nuclear blackmail -- yes, a threat to use his nuclear arsenal if any nation tries to stop him from seizing as much Ukrainian
ViewpointsOct. 6, 2022
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[Kim Myong-sik] Yoon should not expect favors from public broadcasters
In the press world, a “pool reporter” covering a major public event on behalf of a certain group of journalists has to provide the content he or she obtained on the mission for all members simultaneously so that media outlets are given the same opportunities. The MBC-TV cameraman who accompanied President Yoon Suk-yeol on his visit to New York last month and was chosen to cover his participation in President Joe Biden’s Global Fund conference on Sept. 22 caught the South Korean
ViewpointsOct. 6, 2022
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[Editorial] Too many political footballs
The Yoon Suk-yeol administration’s first parliamentary audit is quickly sinking into an abrasive political battlefield where unproductive wrangling between rival parties obscures the real issues that matter to the public and the country. Although people tend to pin little hope on the parliamentary inspection, which started Tuesday and is scheduled to run through Oct. 24, what played out on the first day at the National Assembly was still disappointing. In fact, South Korean lawmakers are n
EditorialOct. 6, 2022
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[Kim Seong-kon] When Nobel Prize season rolls around
Recently, Koreans were elated by the news that June Huh and Lim Yun-chan received the Fields Medal in math and the Gold Medal in the Van Cliburn Piano Competition, respectively. Another piece of good news that delighted Korean Americans was that Jina Kang was selected as the Distinguished Young Woman of California. Originally, Kang was chosen as the Distinguished Young Woman of LA last spring. Then through the state competition, she became the Distinguished Young Woman of California in July. Now
ViewpointsOct. 5, 2022
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[Editorial] No sanctuary in probe
Former President Moon Jae-in reportedly refused to receive the Board of Audit and Inspection's written investigation late last month in connection with the incident of North Korean soldiers shooting dead a South Korean government employee in the western sea. Then the board requested a written inquiry in an email to the office of Moon's secretary, which is said to have returned it Friday. Lee Dae-jun, an official of the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries, went missing on duty from a monit
EditorialOct. 5, 2022
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Indonesia highlights dynamics of bilateral ties with Korea on 77th independence day
Indonesia embassy highlighted dynamics of bilateral ties with Korea celebrating its 77th independence day in Seoul on Sept. 28. Commemorating the independence day under the theme of ‘Recover Faster, Rise Stronger,’ the embassy invited Korean government officials, parliament members, diplomatic corps, businessmen, academics, and friends of Indonesia numbering more than 300 guests at the Floating Island Convention Center in Seoul. Dressed in traditional Javanese Jawi Jangkep, Indonesia
Foreign AffairsOct. 4, 2022
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[Editorial] Collateral damage
Twitch, a popular game streaming platform, dropped its maximum video quality in South Korea on Friday from 1080p to 720p, intensifying disputes over the country’s network usage fee. In a related move, other global platforms such as YouTube and Netflix are expected to stage a tough fight over the fee with local internet service providers. Twitch, a unit of Amazon, said in an update announcement Thursday that its operating cost in South Korea has been on the rise and the trend appears to be
EditorialOct. 4, 2022
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[Lee In-hyun] Jacqueline du Pre, the greatest UK cellist
I received very sad news on Sept. 8. Queen Elizabeth II passed away at Balmoral. She was 96 years old. This year is the queen’s platinum jubilee, marking the 70th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth becoming the British monarch. Not only the British people, but many people around the world mourned her death, including myself. As I was reading an article about Queen Elizabeth II, I suddenly remembered a woman. Her name was Jacqueline du Pre, who was an unfortunate cellist. When I heard her nam
ViewpointsOct. 4, 2022
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[Arjun V.K. Sharma] Climate change to spawn next pandemic
The threat of climate change conjures certain scenes: Smoke billowing from a forest aflame. Smothering heat clinging to the distorted asphalt of a densely packed street. Glaciers breaking off into a rising sea. Another scenario should be equally terrifying but is harder to envision: A virus leaving the animal that has played blind host for an encroaching human being. For years, scientists have been warning us about an unsettling reality: that climate change will make pandemics more likely in our
ViewpointsOct. 4, 2022
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[Lyle Goldstein] Biden pokes at China again over Taiwan. At what cost to US national interests?
President Joe Biden’s foreign policy deserves higher marks than most have given it. Biden boldly pulled the plug on the Afghanistan quagmire, so that Americans could stop hemorrhaging blood and treasure in an endless war. He has performed a delicate “Goldilocks routine” with respect to Russia’s brutal invasion of Ukraine: giving a vital assist to save Kyiv, while balancing that support with caution, asserting, “We’re trying to avoid World War III.” That
ViewpointsSept. 30, 2022
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[Editorial] Dispute on price controls
The South Korean government is now running a pilot program of the delivery unit price indexation system -- an interlocking price adjustment system for the cost of goods delivered, chiefly designed to help protect small businesses when they handle orders from big companies. But there is a dispute over whether it undermines free market principles, especially concerning artificial price control by the government. Under the system when there is, for instance, a big change in the price of raw materia
EditorialSept. 30, 2022
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[M. Niaz Asadullah] Asia’s captive market for migrant labor
COVID-19 has disrupted labor markets virtually everywhere, pushing millions of migrant workers into poverty. In high-income Asian countries, the pandemic has highlighted these workers’ vulnerability to redundancy, pay cuts, and exclusion from vital social safety nets. The authorities in Singapore and Malaysia have deported some of those who spoke out against inadequate provisions or mistreatment in the workplace. But, as global supply chains are restored and economies reopen, employers are
ViewpointsSept. 29, 2022