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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[Lee Sun-young] Safeguarding our fragile democracy
The Choi Soon-sil scandal is hurling South Korea into unknown political territory. With the presidency of Park Geun-hye crippled to an extent that some describe it as having fallen into “a vegetative state,” political parties are trying to erect a new Cabinet headed by a powerful prime minister.There is no consensus yet on some important details, but the basic idea is to have a prime minister run the executive branch, as in a parliamentary system. The embattled president would then take a backs
Nov. 9, 2016
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[Dan K. Thomasson] After all this campaigning, things in Washington still unlikely to change
Think again if you believe the immediate post-election period will bring relief from the political turmoil that has plagued the nation as seldom before. Whoever wins -- Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump -- the chaos is likely to be as disrupting as it has been the last two years, and maybe more so.Some time back, Trump said among the first things he would do upon capturing the White House for the Republicans is put Clinton in the slammer -- not a tone that encourages bipartisanship. Republicans me
Nov. 8, 2016
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[Kim Seong-kon] Can video games really never be art?
In 2010, the late film critic Roger Ebert announced, “Video games can never be art.” Ebert was only partially right. Video games may look like a frivolous form of entertainment and not serious art. But consider these questions: What is art? Who is authorized to define art? How do you distinguish art from nonart? As the late American novelist, Donald Barthelme argued, “Who decides?” And who can deny the fact that video games have now become a dominant forms of media? As a renowned film critic, Eb
Nov. 8, 2016
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[Matthew J. Hefti] Support veterans by voting against death penalty
Veterans are disproportionately represented on death row, and this election, death is on the ballot in three of our union’s states. In advance of Veterans Day, citizens can show support for veterans with their votes.Any number of good reasons justify abolishing the death penalty in the United States. From 2007-2012, the United States found itself in the company of China, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq, among the countries with the most executions, which hardly puts us in enlightened company. The d
Nov. 8, 2016
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[Tom Orlik] China’s gift for the next US president
In 2008, incoming President Barack Obama inherited a US financial crisis that was to some degree made in China. The next US president may well confront a Chinese financial crunch with its origins in the US, as China unwinds the credit imbalances built up over the last eight years to defend against that global slump.The causes of the 2008 crisis were many and varied. US policymakers and regulators, as well as rule-bending behavior in real estate and banking, are largely to blame. But China’s merc
Nov. 8, 2016
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Enjoy a Greek yogurt, employ a Syrian refugee
Over the last several months, a nativist campaign in the US has homed in on a curious target: a brand of yogurt. Chobani faces a boycott, while its founder, Hamdi Ulukaya, has faced death threats -- all because the company hires refugees, and he wants more US firms to do the same.On a personal level, these attacks are reprehensible. On a policy level, they are at best counterproductive and at worst dishonest. If you believe that refugees shouldn’t be a burden to taxpayers and should better integ
Nov. 8, 2016
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[Robert J. Fouser] What President Park should do
As some rumors are turning into facts, the Choi Soon-sil scandal has exploded into a crisis that threatens to bring down President Park Geun-hye. At the root of the crisis is public revulsion over the thought that Choi, the daughter of Choi Tae-min, the founder of a religious cult, could have had influence over the president and could have profited from her relationship with the president. Choi Tae-min, a friend of the president’s father Park Chung-hee, became close to her after her mother was a
Nov. 8, 2016
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[Albert R. Hunt] Dismal campaign foreshadows crisis of government
One word describes this US presidential election: dismal. That has ominous implications for the important tasks of governing over the next several years.Elections in which big issues are joined have value because they provide a governance agenda to be debated and decided. Both sides bear responsibility for the sorry state of politics this year, but the overwhelming blame belongs to Donald Trump. He has largely waged a campaign of venom and cruel insults that was substantively shallow. If you wad
Nov. 8, 2016
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[Megan McArdle] Two words to end all consideration of voting for Trump
At the beginning of September, an anonymous conservative writing under the pseudonym “Publius Decius Mus” published an essay in the Claremont Review of Books laying out his reasons for voting for Donald Trump. The name presumably comes from the famed Roman consul who performed the devotio ritual, dedicating himself to the god of the underworld and covering his head with his toga before sacrificing himself in a spectacular feat of heroism at the Battle of Sentinum. “Dedicated to the Lords of Hell
Nov. 7, 2016
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[Jonathan Bernstein] Republicans Lose If the Bullies Win
If there‘s one thing conservatives should know by now, it’s that there‘s no appeasing the radicals in their midst. Yet not only do they continue to try; in some cases organizations formerly described as “conservative” have moved their firepower to the fringes.Thus, Heritage Action -- the activist sister organization to the Heritage Foundation -- is pushing the view that Democratic presidents should never again be allowed to get a new Supreme Court justice confirmed. If that means keeping the cur
Nov. 7, 2016
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India’s Deadly Smog
India beats China on one national measure at least: Its air has rapidly become more unbreathable. Urgent action is needed to cleanse Indian skies.This week, air pollution in New Delhi has been truly off the charts: Tiny particulates, which are especially deadly, topped 999 micrograms per cubic meter -- 40 times what is considered safe and beyond what the scale was designed to measure. While air quality tends to worsen around this time of year as millions of Indians light firecrackers to celebrat
Nov. 7, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Russia may be wounded but it can still bite
Whoever wins Tuesday’s presidential election will face an assertive, aggrieved Russia whose risk-taking behavior under President Vladimir Putin is increasingly worrisome to American experts. Today’s pushy, headstrong Russia presents a paradox: By most measures, it’s a country in decline, with a sagging economy, an underdeveloped technology base and a shrinking population. Corruption pervades nearly every sector. The collapse of the Soviet Union is still an open wound, and many Russians blame the
Nov. 7, 2016
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[Jay Ambrose] Trump and Clinton each worse than the other
Come election season, citizens should inform themselves, they should listen to the arguments of all the candidates, they should think things through as best they can, and then they should get out and vote.Maybe the vote won’t count for much, but if too many found refuge in that excuse, the democratic experiment would quickly shrivel. Maybe it can be the case that neither candidate seems worth a hoot, but knowing that even slight differences can have major consequences, isn’t it still our duty to
Nov. 7, 2016
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Parliament’s duty to act on Brexit
If it’s upheld on appeal, Thursday’s ruling on Brexit from the UK High Court gives members of parliament a responsibility some might prefer to shirk -- namely, to offer voters they represent their best judgment on Britain’s future in Europe. When the time comes, they need to stand up and do what they’re paid for.The judges ruled against Prime Minister Theresa May and her government, declaring that a vote in parliament is required before May invokes Article 50 of the European Union treaties, whic
Nov. 7, 2016
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[Jean Pisani-Ferry] The new fiscal reality
“When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?” This, reportedly, is how Keynes replied to the criticism that he had changed his position on the policy response to the Great Depression.Pragmatism of this sort is not that common: Policy views are often characterized by considerable inertia. Too frequently, today’s perspectives remain shaped by yesterday’s facts.Fiscal policy is a case in point. Facts have changed in two significant ways. First, for sovereign states, long-term borr
Nov. 6, 2016
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Dumb power of smart devices
The more we learn about the recent cyberattack that brought down much of the internet in the United States, the more appalling it becomes.Landing in three waves, the attack temporarily crippled parts of Dynamic Network Services, better known as Dyn, which connects some of the largest web-based companies with their customers. As a result, internet users on the East Coast and later across the country were blocked or delayed when trying to use popular online services such as Netflix, eBay, Twitter
Nov. 6, 2016
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[Jonathan Bernstein] The youth voting revolution has begun
I’ve been advocating a lower voting age for some time, but it always seemed a theoretical exercise. Residents of San Francisco on Tuesday have a chance to make it a reality if they support Proposition F, which would lower the voting age for local elections to 16.It has a good chance of passing: The only recent poll shows that a slim plurality favor the measure.San Francisco would be the third US city to lower the voting age to 16, after two Maryland suburbs, Takoma Park and Hyattsville, took the
Nov. 6, 2016
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[Barry Ritholtz] We’re more productive than we think
Earlier this year I suggested that there was a problem with the tools we use to measure economic productivity. The way we capture formal productivity data hasn’t kept up with modern ways of doing business. As a result, I believe economists underestimate productivity increases.I have since refined that conclusion: Productivity models don’t properly capture gains created by the application of new technology. Furthermore, without a revamp of Bureau of Labor Statistics’ productivity models, this dis
Nov. 6, 2016
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Cuba conundrum: Engagement vs. embargo
A growing number of Americans are invading Havana’s Malecon -- jogging, strolling and dancing to rumba buskers as waves pound the seawall. Cohibas clenched in teeth, they’re toting away bottles of Havana Club rum, filling up Airbnb rooms and flying back to the states on JetBlue. US hotel chains are planting stakes, as trade missions staffed by politicians and businesspeople stream in and out.Momentum is building in the ongoing detente between the US and Cuba. Yet, something still isn’t right.The
Nov. 6, 2016
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[Francis Wilkinson] Clinton must begin waging her next war -- if she wins the election
If Hillary Clinton wins the presidential election Tuesday, she will be under no illusions about what awaits. Even if Donald Trump is defeated, the political party that nurtured his dangerous ambition will not be. (And Trump may never concede defeat in any case.)Barack Obama was elected president in 2008 amid waves of euphoria. By the night of his inauguration, with the US losing thousands of jobs a day and the world hurtling toward a second Great Depression, Republican leaders had decided to opp
Nov. 6, 2016