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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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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[Heidi Stevens] There’s work to be done
“I’m not shocked. I’m awake.”Those words — novelist Attica Locke’s words — greeted me as I drove home from a TV station Wednesday morning, fresh off a segment where we talked about healing our divisions after a bitter, divisive election.I voted for Hillary Clinton. Not reluctantly. Not begrudgingly. Not just to keep Donald Trump out of the Oval Office. I found her to be inspiring and eminently qualified, and I truly loved her vision for our country and its people — all of its people.Is she perfe
Nov. 13, 2016
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Trump poisoned our politics
World markets tanked as American voters elected Donald Trump the nation’s 45th president over the far more experienced insider, Hillary Clinton, showing themselves to be even more divided than any serious pundit could have imagined.The bombastic and divisive businessman will confront the herculean and perhaps impossible task of calling us to a common purpose. We hope it’s clear to Trump that we cannot flourish as long as we are in this state of division.Republicans retained control of the House
Nov. 13, 2016
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[Mihir Sharma] Don’t despair, liberals: Fight
Welcome, American liberals. Welcome to the special torment of discovering that you do not know your country.You thought, no doubt, you were exempt -- immune from the shocks that liberals throughout the world have felt in recent years. And I can understand why: Because while you have suffered defeats at the hands of Reagan and the Bushes, and it seemed at times like your country would bend back the arc of history, it never really did.But this time, you know, is different. This is a different sort
Nov. 13, 2016
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[Vladimir Hlasny] Amexit
Team Trump had it right. Media were biased. Until the last moment they devotedly preached that Hillary would win. But she did not. The Brexiteers had it right too. Experts were duping them. Experts claimed there was no way Brexit would happen, and they lied. It happened. In a strange case of self-fulfilling prophecies, the Brexiteers and Team Trump called it right, and showed that they were on top with their situation-reading skills. They had titillated experts that they were biased and wrong, o
Nov. 13, 2016
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[Megan McArdle] No shame in joining Trump administration
In 1975 economist Milton Friedman gave a series of lectures in Chile, as well as a small amount of advice to Augusto Pinochet, the country’s right-wing dictator. The advice was not on how to best crack down on political dissent, or where to hide the bodies of dissidents you were trying to disappear; it involved economic policy, and was advice that was similar to what he’d have given any government. Nonetheless, Friedman’s left-wing critics somewhat predictably used this brief interlude in a deca
Nov. 13, 2016
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[Mark Davis] Trump victory is not the nightmare liberal tormentors have painted
After one of the harshest, loudest presidential campaigns in memory, the first thing that occurs to me in the wake of a Donald Trump victory is the need for some quiet humility. If the characteristically brash president-elect can display it, I can surely follow suit.I spent more than a year favoring Ted Cruz, up to the moment he withdrew. But even within that span of time, there were so many brutal slanders leveled at Trump that I spent more time defending him than I did voicing my preference fo
Nov. 13, 2016
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Trump’s economic promises tapped into worker angst
As the American economy becomes more complex, the winners and losers change. On Election Night, Donald Trump tapped into not just economic populism, but the wide chasm between those prospering on Wall Street and those struggling on Main Street.If you have a 401(k), the financial economy has been good to you. But the view from the factory floor, especially through the heart of the country, looks decidedly different. Blue-collar jobs and pensions that once supported a stable middle-class lifestyle
Nov. 13, 2016
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Trump’s duty to the United States
Donald Trump has made history as the first man with no government experience to reach the highest office in the land -- and as the least popular and most divisive candidate ever to do so. The burden is now on him to leave a mean-spirited campaign behind and demonstrate that he can bring people together to move the country forward on important issues. His victory speech hit the right notes. After showing a graciousness toward Hillary Clinton that was lacking throughout the campaign, he said it wa
Nov. 11, 2016
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[Eric Frazier] No, it’s not end of the world
Dear progressive, Like you, I couldn’t sleep much last night. My brain refused to shut down. It churned relentlessly, chewing on dark possibilities of what a President Trump will mean. A trade war with China that craters the US economy? An impulsive military strike in Syria? An economic crisis sparked by the Mexican wall? A secret Nixonian “enemies list” prosecuted by Attorney General Rudy Giuliani? Much to worry about, yes. Hard not to be depressed and demoralized. But hold off on that Google s
Nov. 11, 2016
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[Ravi Velloor] Trump triumph a sign of the times
This election, it was said, was Hillary Clinton’s to lose. Seems it turned out that way all the same.Pollsters had called it for her. With a ton of money at her disposal, a charismatic husband who continues to be loved by most Americans, vast experience in government as an active First Lady and later, secretary of state, Clinton was uniquely positioned for the top job, never mind that many found her chutzpah hard to swallow.Beyond all this was what was thought to be favorable demographics.Americ
Nov. 10, 2016
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[Jim DeMint] Voters rejected broken legacy of Clinton, Obama
Donald Trump’s victory was a defeat for the political establishment and its allies in the mainstream media. More importantly, it was an affirmation of conservative ideas.Hillary Clinton ran a personality-driven campaign, more against her opponent than for a coherent set of policies. But voters had serious concerns: illegal immigration, trade, taxes, jobs, health care, gun rights, national debt, and many others. In each case, a branch of our government had either exceeded its constitutional autho
Nov. 10, 2016
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[Dick Meyer] What will a Trump presidency mean? Who knows
Historians instruct journalists that the great events they witness are rarely as momentous as they first appear once seen in the sweep of history.If there was ever a time to ignore that old wisdom, it is now. History was made on Election Day 2016 on a grand scale and in bizarre style. The nation is stunned, incredulous and disoriented -- even the victors.In more than two centuries, America has never seen anything like the election of Donald J. Trump. It has been our weirdest election and one of
Nov. 10, 2016
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[David Ignatius] What President Trump’s foreign policy will look like
Donald Trump proclaimed “America First” on his way to his head-spinning victory in Tuesday’s presidential election, and the success of that message will rock many foreign capitals where leaders have feared that Trump would alter the basics of US foreign policy.Making predictions about Trump’s foreign policy is difficult, given his lack of experience. But the most likely bet is that as president he will seek to do what he promised during the campaign in breaking from current US approaches to Russ
Nov. 10, 2016
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Time to heal and move forward
Midway through the 2016 presidential campaign, when it became clear Donald Trump would claim the Republican nomination, a rueful joke circulated among disbelievers: “Can we just admit that we may have taken this ‘Anybody can grow up to be president’ thing a bit too far?”The disbelievers have gone from laughter to shock. On Tuesday, Americans put the future of their nation in the hands of Donald Trump, an untested leader with deep character flaws and no experience in governance or national securi
Nov. 10, 2016
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Into the great unknown with Trump
Come January, Donald Trump will be sworn in as the 45th president of the United States. This newspaper, along with many Americans both liberal and conservative, had hoped never to write that sentence. But the time for arguing about who should lead this country for the next four years is over. When Trump takes the oath of office in January, he will become the only president this great nation has. He will be our president, and yours, too, no matter how you voted or even if you voted. Enhancing his
Nov. 10, 2016
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[Albert R. Hunt] Trump‘s guide to team building is his instinct
Most new Republican administrations are filled with experienced hands from a previous government -- a few governors and members of Congress, a prominent corporate chief executive or two. That’s not likely with Donald Trump; look instead for fellow deal-makers, political pals and fervent early supporters.More than any modern president, Trump doesn‘t come from the party establishment and owes it nothing. Some conservative think tanks will rush to fill the void, but with limited interest in policy,
Nov. 9, 2016
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[Conor Sen] the election forecaster since Brexit poll
When election season rolls around, Americans want the news before it happens. The journalistic innovation of poll aggregation tries to meet that demand with political forecasts, and it’s become a booming business. But there’s a problem.The credit for this business, and perhaps the blame, belongs to FiveThirtyEight, which earned its reputation by using others’ polls to forecast the outcomes of the 2008 and 2012 presidential elections. Presidential and Senate candidates send out fundraising messag
Nov. 9, 2016
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[Aryeh Neier] Africa vs. the International Criminal Court
On Oct. 19, South African President Jacob Zuma’s government delivered documents to the United Nations signaling its intent to withdraw from the International Criminal Court. Many ICC observers were taken by surprise.A week earlier, Burundi charted a course to become the first member state to leave the ICC. The ICC had indicated it would investigate, and possibly indict, government officials after Burundian President Pierre Nkurunziza threw his country into turmoil by pursuing a third term, in vi
Nov. 9, 2016
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[Kim Myong-sik] Misdirected Korean culture ‘globalization’ projects
The “globalization of Korean food” was one of the major goals in the cultural domain of the previous Lee Myung-bak administration. Then first lady Kim Yoon-ok, known as a good cook, took the voluntary mission of propagating Korean culinary culture overseas during the five years while her husband was struggling to bring about an economic recovery and strengthen national security. Criticism was raised, however, when Kim spent state funds for the publication of a cook book in English under her aut
Nov. 9, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Three big items left on Obama’s agenda
President Obama should focus on three foreign policy challenges, postelection, to finish fights that began on his watch. These include setting rules for cyber behavior with Russia and other nations, pressing on toward Raqqa and the destruction of the Islamic State group, and a “Hail Mary” effort to pass the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal during the lame-duck session of Congress. The most delicate challenge during the transition involves Russia, whose pre-election hacking of Democratic Part
Nov. 9, 2016