Most Popular
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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Jung's paternity reveal exposes where Korea stands on extramarital babies
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Samsung entangled in legal risks amid calls for drastic reform
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[Herald Interview] 'Trump will use tariffs as first line of defense for American manufacturing'
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Heavy snow alerts issued in greater Seoul area, Gangwon Province; over 20 cm of snow seen in Seoul
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Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
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[Herald Review] 'Gangnam B-Side' combines social realism with masterful suspense, performance
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[Health and care] Getting cancer young: Why cancer isn’t just an older person’s battle
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Prosecutors seek 5-year prison term for Samsung chief in merger retrial
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UN talks on plastic pollution treaty begin with grim outlook
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Catch share: Responsible ways to harvest fish
Most of the news about the world’s oceans is a litany of gloom: rising water temperatures, acidification, bleached coral reefs, tons of Japanese tsunami trash drifting toward North America’s west coast. So it is worth noting when something good is happening with the seas. Last month, the U.S. government reported that six types of fish, including Maine haddock, summer flounder in the mid-Atlantic and Chinook salmon in northern California, had fully recovered in the past year from decades of overf
June 29, 2012
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Parties must ensure bills pass upper house
The House of Representatives passed bills on integrated reform of the social security and tax systems at a plenary meeting Tuesday. This marked a significant step toward the nation’s fiscal reconstruction and social security reform.The set of bills ― with an increase in the consumption tax rate as the centerpiece ― was approved by the ruling Democratic Party of Japan and its junior partner, People’s New Party, and also by the two main opposition parties, the Liberal Democratic Party and New Kome
June 29, 2012
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Exit, entry management
Besides a heavy dose of routine legislative scrutiny, the Chinese National People’s Congress will review five draft laws in five days, the topics ranging from seniors’ rights to government budgets.But the small yet growing expat community across the country will be most interested in the third reading of the draft law on exit and entry control. Especially in the wake of the recent media frenzy over the city of Beijing’s ongoing efforts to deal with illegal immigration.Over-analysis and misinterp
June 29, 2012
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Go boldly into space, but go jointly too
Not without reason, China was in an exuberant mood last week over its first manned docking in space and its record 6,965m submersible dive in the Mariana Trench. Netizens poignantly recalled how Mao Zedong waxed poetically: “We can clasp the moon in the ninth heaven and seize turtles deep down in the five seas.” The simultaneous achievements deserve to be toasted even if others “have been there, done that.”China lags the United States and Russia by decades in manned space flights. And a Swiss-Am
June 29, 2012
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[Park Sang-seek] Looking into the world through the Syrian crisis
Syria is still going through a bloody crisis. The Syrian crisis provides the world with many lessons about how to maintain domestic and international peace and security. The opposition forces began demonstrations in early 2011 demanding democracy and Bashar al-Assad violently responded. The Sunni majority supports the opposition forces and the Alawite and Shiite minorities support the government, while other ethnic and religious minority groups are taking neutral or opportunistic positions. In t
June 29, 2012
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[Marten Schultz] Justice for Sweden and Assange
STOCKHOLM ― Julian Assange’s bizarre bid for political asylum in Ecuador’s embassy in London has claimed headlines everywhere, but it has obscured an important truth: last month’s decision by the United Kingdom’s Supreme Court that Assange should be extradited to Sweden to face allegations of sexual crimes was the only possible outcome. The alternative ― to reject the European arrest warrant issued by Swedish authorities ― would have signaled distrust of Sweden’s legal system, which would have b
June 28, 2012
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In praise of the heavenly hammock
If I wrote a history of the hammock, I’d detail the texture of hamack-tree bark, record the number of hammocks Columbus packed for his return trip to Spain, and dig up reactions among Old World royalty to the slings that let natives sleep above creepy-crawlies. There would be chapters about hammocks on ships of sea and space, chapters on the complexities of weave. I’d think about princes in palaces swaying in the breeze. I’d think about hammocks in the trenches of jungle wars.But as soon as I go
June 28, 2012
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[Meghan Daum] 2012’s pop song for grads: You are not special
Every year around this time, a few notable lines from a few notable commencement speeches start insinuating themselves into the canon of “words to live by.” Recent favorites include Steve Jobs’ 2005 speech at Stanford (“Your time is limited, so don’t waste it living someone else’s life”). Then there was Stephen Colbert’s 2006 address at Knox College about “saying yes.” Also in 2005 was David Foster Wallace’s now-enshrined speech at Kenyon College, which discussed freedom, among other things, and
June 28, 2012
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Don’t count out Facebook’s business model just yet
Facebook Inc.’s disastrous initial public offering has led to an increasing consensus that the social networking site was overpriced and that its business model is flawed. Some attribute the debacle to issues raised in the company’s prospectus, such as the difficulty of monetizing mobile technology. Others have pointed to the slow growth in advertising revenue or questioned Facebook’s strategy of collecting vast quantities of data from its networked users to enable customized ads. Yet the pillar
June 28, 2012
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[Dominique Moisi] Emerging markets’ EU problem
PARIS ― From Hong Kong to Sao Paulo, and all points between, one word dominates all others among big investors: Greece. Will the Greeks remain in the eurozone? What will happen to the European Union and the global economy if they do not?Until recently, Europe was a sort of mirror that confirmed for the major emerging economies the spectacular nature of their own success. They could contrast their high growth rates with Europe’s high levels of debt. They could oppose their “positive energy” with
June 28, 2012
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[David Ignatius] A cautious backgrounder on leaks
WASHINGTON ― It’s hard for a journalist to be objective on the subject of leaks, a bit like asking a lawyer if he thinks litigation is a good method for resolving disputes. People in the news business always have a bias toward more information, even on sensitive subjects involving intelligence policy. So the reader should discount for my inherent bias in favor of informing the public, and of the process that leads to disclosure ― namely, leaks. We are in a new debate about leaks, flowing mainly
June 27, 2012
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Is your couch cushion trying to kill you?
Imagine if government officials knew that certain chemicals were hazardous enough to cause health problems as serious as cancer and neurological defects, yet were largely powerless to restrict them.That, in a nutshell, is the state of chemical regulation in the U.S. On paper, the Environmental Protection Agency has the authority to regulate or ban toxic substances. In practice, the agency faces so many hurdles that it hasn’t tried to do so since it made an ill-fated run at asbestos in 1991.More
June 27, 2012
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Court order serves democracy in Pakistan
ISLAMABAD ― On June 19, in what it called a “short order,” Pakistan’s Supreme Court removed Syed Yousaf Raza Gilani as the country’s prime minister, a post that he had held for more than four years ― longer than any of his 16 predecessors. For those who favor democracy in Pakistan, the court’s decision is cause, not for concern, but for celebration.Gilani had been convicted weeks earlier of contempt of court, after he refused to comply with a court order directing him to write to Swiss authoriti
June 27, 2012
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Somali piracy: A threat and an opportunity for major rival powers
The coasts of Somalia and the Gulf of Aden have been home for some of the worst acts of piracy for years, costing lives and billions of dollars in damage every year and threatening Indian Ocean trade and shipment in one of the most vital trade routes in the world. But this part of the world is also emerging as an area of cooperation between (sometimes rival) countries and an opportunity to project power for others. Whether it is the U.S. Navy rescuing Iranian fishermen, or Iranian naval forces r
June 27, 2012
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[Kim Myong-sik] Old pastor’s belated repentance over son’s succession
― Archbishop Yeom Soo-jung was inaugurated as the head of the Catholic Seoul Archdiocese, succeeding Cardinal Chung Jin-suk in a mass at Myeongdong Cathedral. ― Pastor Emeritus Kim Chang-in of the Chunghyun Church in Seoul made a public repentance for his role in appointing his son Kim Sung-gwan as head pastor of the church, the largest congregation in the “Hapdong” sect of the Korean Presbyterian denomination, in 1997. ― The General Assembly of the Buddhist Jogye Order revised several regulatio
June 27, 2012
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[Lee Jae-min] Entitlement to a perfect vacation?
Koreans work long hours. In the eyes of foreigners, Korea is a country of hard-working people, and an epitome of work ethic. A recent OECD survey says that Koreans work 2,193 hours a year, while the OECD average is only 1,749 hours. As “dynamic” as the country is in many different ways, there is simply too much work to be done with a streamlined workforce. On top of that, the general unwritten rule of the office is that people stay in the office at least until the boss of the section calls it a
June 26, 2012
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George Zimmerman case and the pre-trial system
Proceedings in Florida’s case against George Zimmerman for the tragic shooting death of Trayvon Martin have recently provided an object lesson in how the institution of bail is supposed to work ― but almost never does.Recently Zimmerman’s wife was charged with perjury for allegedly lying at her husband’s bail hearing in April; she testified that the couple was broke, which prompted the court to set a low bond. But since then, prosecutors have alleged that, at the time of the hearing, the Zimmerm
June 26, 2012
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Redefining sustainable development for megacities
One of the most striking changes at Rio+20, compared to the original 1992 Earth Summit, is the extensive discussion of population issues. In part, this is driven by the fact that many developing countries, including the BRICs, are seeking to redefine what sustainability means with their generally rapid annual growth rates, and high population growth which is estimated to see world population rise from around 7 billion today, to between 8 billion and 11 billion by 2050.This reminds us of the mass
June 26, 2012
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State, market and money
Joseph Yam’s paper on “The Future of the Monetary System in Hong Kong” caused quite a stir this month. Irrespective of what happens to the Hong Kong dollar peg, the fundamental thrust of Joseph’s argument is irrefutable ― that no fixed exchange rate system is consistent with sustainable budgetary deficits. This is the major lesson learned from the current European crisis and was bitterly learned in the last Asian financial crisis. Hence, I interprete Joseph’s remarkable essay as a reminder that
June 26, 2012
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[Kim Seong-kon] When humans are worse than the machines they make
As machines increasingly become an indispensable part of human lives, we often wonder: “What is the relationship between men and machines? Are they mutually exclusive or reciprocally supplementary?” We also wonder, “What would the differences between humans and robots be if the latter was made of human blood and flesh?” In fact, machines are things we cannot live without, and yet can be harmful and dangerous if misused. Thus we can neither simply dismiss machines, nor be too fascinated by their
June 26, 2012