Most Popular
-
1
Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
-
2
Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
-
3
Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
-
4
First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
-
5
Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
-
6
Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
-
7
Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
-
8
Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
-
9
Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
-
10
Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
-
Antonio Guterres is ideal choice as leader
The permanent members of the UN Security Council have chosen Antonio Guterres, a former prime minister of Portugal, to succeed Ban Ki-moon as secretary-general. The appointment to the initial five-year term still needs approval by the 193-member UN General Assembly but that should be a formality.There is little question that Guterres, 67, is up to the job. Portugal, a country of nearly 11 million, has a complex economy and foreign policy that spreads across the world, as a result of Portugal hav
Oct. 16, 2016
-
[David Ignatius] Struggling to deal with NK danger
When South Korean officials talk about the growing nuclear challenge from the North, they use red-alert phrases like “existential threat,” “imminent danger” and “dagger at the throat.” They want Americans to understand that this long-running story of brinksmanship has entered a new phase. One senior South Korean official told me starkly, “A nuclear missile from the North can land on this office in four to five minutes. We don’t have the luxury of thinking twice. ... This is no longer a dark clo
Oct. 14, 2016
-
[Brent Skorup] Online media’s new taxing problem
There is a troubling trend of cities putting new taxes — so-called Netflix taxes — on streaming music, online gaming, e-books, and online video distributors like Netflix, Hulu and Sling. Pennsylvania, Chicago and dozens of California cities have recently implemented or proposed taxes on online media. Yet there are several legal and economic problems with these taxes. First, some of these taxes may violate the First Amendment since they single out certain types of media for taxation. Courts take
Oct. 14, 2016
-
[Karamjit Kaur] Aviation emission control scheme gets solid backing
There were differences and reservations but when push came to shove, the deal was done. A historic UN consensus to cap carbon emissions for the aviation sector has received solid backing from major countries, including those in Southeast Asia. Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand and Malaysia are among 64 countries that have agreed to participate on a voluntary basis in a global market-based measure to control carbon dioxide pollution from international flights. Together, these countries account for a
Oct. 13, 2016
-
[Robert B. Reich] Why all progressives must vote for Hillary
I continue to hear from many people who call themselves progressives or liberals but tell me they won’t vote for Hillary Clinton in the upcoming election. With due respect, I believe they’re wrong.The following are their three major arguments and my responses.Some claim that Clinton is no better than Donald Trump. “He’s bad, but she’s just as bad,” they say.I’m sorry, but anyone who equates Trump with Clinton hasn’t been paying attention.Donald Trump is a dangerous, bigoted, misogynistic, narcis
Oct. 13, 2016
-
Trump ideas that don’t work
During this ugly presidential campaign, Republican Donald Trump has shown enough about his character and temperament to prove himself unfit for the Oval Office. But on the issues facing this country, Trump has given voters little to go on, offering mainly bare policy outlines and vague generalities. Perhaps that’s because his ideas are poorly thought out -- or they don’t work as advertised. Take Sunday’s presidential debate, for example. When asked how he would make the wealthy pay their fair sh
Oct. 13, 2016
-
[David Ignatius] Trump is the symptom of world‘s coarsening climate
Watching Donald Trump skulking behind Hillary Clinton on the debate stage Sunday night, muttering about locking her up if he wins, was a reminder that we are drifting toward a kind of bullyboy-world, where power is everything. You see this coarsening climate of relations around the globe, in the debasement of the norms that make civilized life possible. Dictators push the limits of power in new ways almost daily: China brazenly builds military bases on disputed rocks and sand in the South China
Oct. 13, 2016
-
[Fidel V. Ramos] Breaking the Ice in the South China Sea
Three months ago, the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague ruled that there was no legal basis for China to claim historic rights to the resources in the West Philippine Sea (also known as the South China Sea), and thus that the Philippines has exclusive rights to the territory. China rejected the ruling, and an icy chill overcame the once-friendly bilateral relationship. It is time to bring back some warmth.Soon after the ruling, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte unexpectedly designat
Oct. 13, 2016
-
[Ong Keng Yong] Asean, rising China looking for win-win solution
The international order is undergoing structural change, not just from the rise of emerging economies, but from the way technologies, social and mobile, are revolutionizing the way information flows within and between societies. We live at a turning point in history, full of promise but also of danger. We are seeing a resurgence of hard nationalism, a backlash against the globalization and the liberal global order. Voters everywhere are confounding all previous expectations in voting against exi
Oct. 13, 2016
-
[Kim Myong-sik] Park’s unfortunate association with peculiar family
It all began with a letter from a self-styled Christian pastor. The sender of the registered mail to 1 Hyoja-dong, Jongno-gu, Seoul, named Choe Tae-min, was totally unknown to the addressee, Park Geun-hye.The contents of the letter were not made public, but, judging from what transpired afterward, it must have carried very moving words to console the young lady who was grieving the death of her mother by an assassin’s bullet.According to legend circulating in media circles, Choe claimed in his l
Oct. 12, 2016
-
[Dan K. Thomasson] The folly of college rankings
This is the time of year when you wake up and discover the alma mater you cherish and support isn’t even in the fourth tier of some expert’s widely publicized idea of the best colleges in the nation. Just when you — having steadily contributed to the institution’s welfare since your own graduation, even when you couldn’t afford it — were planning to send your kid there for a gazillion dollars a year, some bozo or group of bozos comes along and tells you East Blah U. ranks No. 450 out of 500 in t
Oct. 12, 2016
-
[Kim Ji-hyun] Corruption, is it all in the culture?
Who would have imagined the name “Kim Young-ran” would cause so many ripples. Named after the lawmaker who proposed it, the so-called Kim Young-ran law is said to be one of the toughest pieces of corruption-fighting legislation in the country’s history. Its primary purpose is to weed out corruption among government officials, the corporate sector and the media. Despite the barrage of criticism it has faced, particularly from the media for including it in its scope, I see no real problem with the
Oct. 12, 2016
-
Your move, Iran: Hijab stakes at women’s chess match
“One town’s very like another / When your head’s down over your pieces, brother,” according to the lyrics in the musical “Chess.” That is probably not the case when your head has an unfamiliar, unwanted piece of cloth draped over it because of the town -- and the country -- you are in and because you are a woman.So you have to wonder what (and whether) world chess officials were thinking when they decided to hold next year’s women’s world championship in Tehran, where the Islamic Republic comman
Oct. 12, 2016
-
Target Zika
While major government players are distracted by the three-ring circus otherwise known as national politics, the Zika virus has steadily and explosively spread throughout Southeast Asia, triggering travel alerts from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Already, there are 12 reported Zika cases in the Philippines, including one involving a pregnant woman in Iloilo. Those infected had no history of travel to any affected country prior to the illness, which meant they must have acquir
Oct. 12, 2016
-
[Kim Seong-kon] Changing Korean society for the better
In Korean society, if you snitch on others who violate certain laws and report them to the authorities, you will be given reward money. This has given rise to people who make money by constantly snooping around and taking photos of others committing offenses. Such behavior is wrong for many reasons and is an aspect of society that should be changed. Firstly, it is shameful and disgraceful to spy on others and report them to the authorities for the sake of a reward. Of course, you should report a
Oct. 11, 2016
-
[Megan McArdle] Five Types of Voters, More or Less Loyal to Trump
In Washington on Sunday night, the popcorn was popped, the pitchers of election-themed cocktails given a final stir. And then a hush fell over the city as the streets emptied and the professional political class gathered huddled around screens to find out whether Donald Trump would somehow rescue his improbable campaign, or whether he would pound the final nails into its coffin after a brutal weekend of scandalous recordings and cascading Republican disendorsements. The consensus going in was th
Oct. 11, 2016
-
[Stephen Cameron] Toronto fans should do some soul searching
There is only one thing I say to people when asked about the incident involving Baltimore Oriole’s outfielder Kim Hyun-soo and a Toronto Blue Jays fan during Tuesday’s wild card game. “Every city has its fair share of idiots, and Toronto is no exception.” The wild card game was a great game to watch. It had everything a game requires to make it great: big hits, big catches, double plays and a walk off home run. It was exciting and emotional for both players and fans. It was the type of game th
Oct. 11, 2016
-
Trump uses women, goes low against Clinton
Voters who wondered just how low Donald Trump would go in his race against Hillary Clinton got their answer on Sunday night. From the run-up to the debate -- in which Trump held a news conference starring women who say Bill Clinton abused them -- to the debate itself, in which he encroached on Clinton onstage, called her names and threatened to have her jailed if he is elected, the Republican nominee made it clear who he is and what he stands for, which is, among other things, misogyny. The deba
Oct. 11, 2016
-
‘Clean Coal’ Is Far From Real
“There is a thing called clean coal,” Donald Trump said during Sunday night’s debate. But there isn’t -- and won’t be for a considerable time, if ever. Presumably, Trump was referring to so-called carbon-capture technology, which is designed to collect and dispose of coal plants’ carbon-dioxide emissions before they escape into the atmosphere, where they trap heat. That technology may be on the drawing board and in a few small-scale demonstration projects, but it’s not close to being ready for w
Oct. 11, 2016
-
[Robert J. Fouser] Linguistic myths about Hangeul
Oct. 9 was Hangeul Day, named after the ingenious Korean writing system developed under the direction of King Sejong the Great from 1443 to 1446. This year marked the 570th anniversary of the promulgation of Hangeul in 1446.For linguists, Hangeul Day is special because it is the only national holiday honoring a writing system. (North Korea commemorates Hangeul on Jan. 15, but not as a national holiday.) Geoffrey Sampson, a leading expert on writing systems, said, “Whether or not it is ultimately
Oct. 11, 2016