Most Popular
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Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
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Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
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Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
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First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
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Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
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NK troops disguised as 'indigenous' people in Far East for combat against Ukraine: report
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Opposition leader awaits perjury trial ruling
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[Bloomberg] Trump needs plan to deal with China
On the eve of their first-ever meeting this week, Chinese leader Xi Jinping has one great advantage over US President Donald Trump: He knows what he wants. By contrast, US policy toward China looks confused and contradictory. Until and unless this changes, not much progress will be made on critical issues in the most important bilateral relationship in the world.China’s president craves stability as he manages a slowing economy and oversees a major leadership transition this fall. China needs th
April 5, 2017
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[Other view] Nuclear power is worth saving
Last week’s bankruptcy of Westinghouse Electric Co. is yet more evidence, if anyone needed any, that the economics of nuclear power are not good. Like coal, nuclear energy can’t compete against cheap natural gas and ever-cheaper renewables.Unlike coal, however, nuclear energy is a crucial tool in the fight against climate change. So the public subsidies that benefit the nuclear industry in the US are justified, whereas efforts to prop up the coal industry are not.And states are offering or propo
April 5, 2017
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[Kim Ji-hyun] Once the dust settles
One of the most difficult things about working in Japan is the loneliness. Despite the many press conferences, the articles that need to be dealt with, and the ecstasy felt from discovering new Japanese words, I felt a sense of loneliness and detachment that was not altogether enjoyable.It may be because I am a sentimental woman, but there was the sadness of being away from my colleagues, the uneasiness from being away from my former job, the fear of losing contact with my personal connections -
April 5, 2017
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[Dick Meyer] The Russia affair: To commission or not?
To commission or not to commission? That is the question facing Congress and the White House regarding how best to investigate Russia’s meddling in the 2016 elections.Actually, let me rephrase that: That is the question that should be facing Congress and the White House.There is no indication, however, that the independent commission question is receiving any serious attention on either end of Pennsylvania Avenue since Republicans control both ends of that famed thoroughfare, although “control”
April 4, 2017
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[Lee Jae-min] Tricky path ahead: Triangular talks
As the United Kingdom officially notified the European Union on March 29 of its intention to leave the common market, South Korea is quick in preparing to start negotiations with the UK to conclude a bilateral FTA. The UK also chimed in by underscoring the importance of a bilateral FTA to sustain and expand bilateral trade. Article 50 of the Lisbon Treaty will validate the UK departure as of March 29, 2019 when two-year negotiations between the UK and the EU end.Surely, given the magnitude of th
April 4, 2017
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[Nicolas Loris] Rolling back climate regulations with questionable benefits will boost US economy
President Donald Trump’s executive order to undo several Obama era global-warming regulations has some critics steaming. Andrew Steer, president and CEO of the World Resources Institute, accused Trump of “taking a sledgehammer to US climate action.” Sen. Edward Markey, D-Massachusetts, called it “a declaration of war on American leadership on climate change and our clean energy future.” In actuality, the order will benefit all Americans who want affordable and dependable energy and will help ene
April 4, 2017
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[Kim Seong-kon] Beware of those who advocate the greater good
In the 1980s, when anti-military dictatorship demonstrations were prevalent in Korean society, I frequently heard slogans like “For the greater good!” or “For the grand cause!” As long as it was for the grand cause, the sacrifice of human lives was nothing but collateral damage, and individual sacrifice was insignificant and inevitable for the greater good. As a result, in order to fight the dictatorial regime and bring about democracy, anything was justified, even the killing of innocent bystan
April 4, 2017
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[Chicago Tribune] Avoiding another Aleppo: Islamic State group, US air power and civilian lives
A frantic search for any signs of life amid a broken building flattened by an airstrike. Stacks of bodies in bags. Rescuers crouched in the rubble, faces dust-caked and dazed. It sounds like Aleppo, the Syrian city half-obliterated by airstrikes from Russian and Syrian fighter jets. Bombs rained down day after day -- legions of innocent men, women and children were killed or maimed. But this venue is different. It’s Mosul, the northern Iraqi city still clung to by Islamic State group. The dead a
April 4, 2017
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[Other view] Russians in the streets: Large-scale protests have a strong history
Russians demonstrated Sunday in Moscow and 98 other cities and towns across the country, against corruption in the government of President Vladimir Putin. There is a risk of Washington taking the protests less seriously than it should. At the moment, when Americans hear the word “Russia,” they are more likely to think of the threat to the practice of our democracy represented by whatever interference in the 2016 elections Putin’s government may have undertaken. He is on something of a roll in in
April 4, 2017
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[Cynthia M. Allen] Limiting technology begins at home
Last summer, my husband and I canceled our cable television, no easy thing when one’s husband loves college football. The decision to do so was in part our general disgust with the news coverage of the presidential election, but it was also part of a long-term approach to technology in the home.With two young children, we were beginning to feel a need to set boundaries with our own use of that most addictive of all modern vices -- screens. We’ve quickly learned that television is the least exoti
April 3, 2017
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[Noah Smith] Seeking the cure for American economic sclerosis
The Soviet Union had amazing mathematicians, scientists and engineers. Names like Andrey Kolmogorov and Lev Landau are still spoken of with reverence in technical circles. The Russians beat the US into space twice, and for a time had the best missiles and fighter jets in the world. And yet in the 1980s, Russians were standing in lines for bread. The moral of this story is that without good institutions, an economy can’t translate technology into wealth. Economists love to say that in the long ru
April 3, 2017
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[Robert Park] Ji Seong-ho: Hero fostering unity and inspiring change
I’m writing today to convey my appreciation and admiration for Ji Seong-ho, president and founder of Now Action & Unity for NK Human Rights, a leading North Korean human rights organization with the objective of “improving the human rights conditions of North Korea and achieving a unified Korean Peninsula.”Ji and NAUH’s very significant accomplishments are a resplendent light in what seems to be an ever-darkening world. The growing network comprised of many South and North Korean young adults “a
April 3, 2017
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Arms ban treaty talks are unrealistic
Japan announced its decision to abstain from talks on a convention banning nuclear weapons on the opening day of the talks at UN headquarters. While emphasizing Japan’s fundamental position of pursuing nuclear disarmament, disarmament ambassador Nobushige Takamizawa said Japan had to say that it would be difficult to participate in the talks in a constructive manner and in good faith. If the treaty is formulated through talks from which nuclear powers -- the United States, Britain, France, China
April 3, 2017
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[David Ignatius] Listen to the doctors for health care reform
Here’s a radical idea for reframing the health care debate on the ruins of the GOP’s half-baked plan: Let’s listen to doctors, rather than politicians. And let’s begin with a simple formula offered last week by the National Academy of Medicine: “Better health at lower cost.” Better and cheaper. It’s hard to argue with that prescription. Because the real health care crisis in America is about delivery of care, more than the insurance schemes that pay the bills. Costs are continuing to rise, even
April 3, 2017
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[Doyle McManus] Trump deserves some credit for Islamic State successes
While Washington has been absorbed in battles over health care and incipient scandals, a real war is escalating sharply in Syria and Iraq: the one against the Islamic State group. Without much public notice, thousands of US combat troops are back on the ground in the Middle East: roughly 7,000 in Iraq, almost 1,000 in Syria and 2,500 in Kuwait. Those troops aren’t only special operations forces; they include artillery teams fighting in Iraq and a helicopter unit that has flown behind IS group li
April 2, 2017
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[Leonid Bershidsky] The Ukrainian argument for Scottish independence
Now that the UK has formally triggered Brexit and the Scottish Parliament has voted in favor of seeking a second independence referendum, the battle lines are drawn. The Scottish nationalists led by Nicola Sturgeon are telling Theresa May‘s UK government that they’d rather be in the European Union than an independent UK. But, after failing to make an economic case for independence in 2014, nationalists should stress the long view.Despite a preponderance of data in favor of staying in the UK, the
April 2, 2017
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[Solomon Jones] Our pollution masks will be greater than ones Chinese wear
When President Trump signed a new executive order seeking to curb the enforcement of regulations on climate change, he said it was in an effort to save American jobs in the coal industry. In reality, an executive order is not nearly enough to curb the losses coal has faced. For coal jobs to truly make a comeback, the corporate interests that are automating miners out of their jobs would have to stop doing so. The abundant natural gas that resulted from more domestic exploration under the Obama a
April 2, 2017
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[Joshua J. Whitfield] The danger of post-Christian America
“Despotism may govern without faith, but liberty cannot,” said Alexis de Tocqueville, the great political philosopher and observer of our young democracy. Impressed by religion in early American life as lived both in public and private, he observed religion “takes no direct part in the government of society,” even though it remained “foremost of the political institutions of that country.” So combined were the “notions of Christianity” and liberty in American democracy, he thought it impossible
April 2, 2017
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[Other View] Stuck in Syria: US forces are in middle of Turk-Kurd tension
There are still many questions pending — including the one of why the United States is involved — in the long, drawn-out campaign by various forces to take Raqqa, considered the Islamic State group capital, in the interior of Syria. Hundreds of US Special Forces are engaged in the campaign, training Kurdish forces in Syria. But at least part of the time, they are keeping Turkish and Turkish-backed forces from attacking the Kurds. The Trump administration is either letting the Obama policy in Syr
April 2, 2017
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[Silvio Laccetti] America needs champions of sci-tech
With March Madness nearing its end, the nation will soon be able to switch its focus to scores of a different type — those resulting from various state-level and national high school achievement tests. But instead of seeing a champion crowned, we’ll be besieged by a wild array of test score interpretations, encouragements and warnings, particularly in regards to the STEM fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Effective STEM education is seen as crucial to maintaining Ameri
April 2, 2017