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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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
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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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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
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[Robert J. Fouser] The problem with third parties
The US presidential election campaign has entered the final sprint toward Election Day in November.The two major party candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump, are the most disliked candidates in recent memory. Two minor party candidates, Libertarian Party’s Gary Johnson and Green Party’s Jill Stein, are together projected to drain about 10 percent of votes from major party candidates, the highest percentage since 1992. Polls show that the major party candidates are par
Sept. 27, 2016
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[Jeffrey Frankel] Voting for a better US political system
The American political train has gone off the rails, and it seems farther than ever from getting back on track. There has been a lot of finger pointing, with commentators blaming issues like gerrymandering, rising economic inequality, the campaign finance system and unbalanced journalism. But the public cannot address these genuine flaws in the system directly. What they can do is tackle another fundamental problem: low voter turnout.The beauty of democracy is that, if people vote, they can effe
Sept. 26, 2016
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[Editorial] Do not pardon Edward Snowden
The movement to pardon NSA leaker Edward Snowden is picking up momentum, with human rights groups, editorial boards, the Libertarian candidate for president and some former intelligence officers hopping on board. Even Eric Holder, the former attorney general, has said Snowden performed a “public service.”But to show leniency for the man now enjoying Vladimir Putin’s hospitality in Moscow would be to ignore the great damage he has done to US national security. It would also set a bad precedent.It
Sept. 26, 2016
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[Pana Janviroj] Asia heading toward a seismic changeover
In a decade’s time, visitors to Southeast Asia, as well as South and Northeast Asia, may find their personal experiences in their respective destinations differ quite drastically. Each Asian nation is busy operating at its own pace, plotting a new stage of economic development and growth -- despite ongoing global economic uncertainty. In the process of this seismic shift, some countries have chosen to work in partnerships while others are tackling the challenges alone. All of them reflect As
Sept. 26, 2016
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[Michael Farren] Taxis, regulators must adapt for industry
Some dinosaurs escaped extinction at the end of the Cretaceous Period 65 million years ago by evolving into birds. Taxi companies around the United States face a similar cataclysm today -- thanks to upstart ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft. Like the dinosaurs, taxis must adapt or die. Unfortunately, cities like Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Chicago are holding onto regulations that will seal the taxis’ fate. Ride-sharing’s rise has been as unexpected and tumultuous as the dinosaurs’ demise.
Sept. 26, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Leaders of Egypt, Iran have qualms
What do the presidents of Egypt and Iran, two countries across the Sunni-Shiite chasm in the Middle East, have in common? A lot, it turns out, including preoccupation with their internal stability and hunger for economic growth. Both talk about moderation and the deep resources of their ancient cultures, even as the region’s sectarian war rages. They claim to want greater human rights but insist that their systems can only change gradually. They seem to worry most about security -- the specter o
Sept. 26, 2016
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[Ann McFeatters] Trump’s arsenal of lies
While campaigning earlier this year, Donald Trump insisted the unemployment rate in Wisconsin was 20 percent. In reality, it was about 4.5 percent then and has only dropped since. He said Wisconsin has a stagnant economy with a budget deficit of $2.2 billion. In fact, the state is on track to have a balanced budget.Lying -- they say we all do it, sooner or later. But the cost of being discovered in a lie is painfully high -- usually.Like when Hillary Clinton absurdly said FBI Director James Com
Sept. 25, 2016
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[Jeffrey Robertson] The United Nations’ troubled child
In an interview on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, Foreign Minister Yun Byung-Se quite rightly questioned North Korea’s membership of the United Nations in light of its repeated violations of UN Security Council resolutions: “I think all members of the UN have to ask themselves whether North Korea is really qualified.” It is a highly pertinent question, which requires deep consideration -- and most school teachers would know why.Think of international relations as a schooly
Sept. 25, 2016
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[Ana Palacio] The end of the European supernation?
Since the eurozone crisis began in 2008, the European Union has, from a political perspective, led an intergovernmental life in supranational clothing. But as the EU prepares to negotiate Britain’s exit, it is becoming increasingly apparent that the union no longer has any clothes at all. The question now is whether the EU’s status as an enterprise dominated by its member states is permanent.The supremacy of member states -- especially Germany -- in EU decision-making is far from new. It was evi
Sept. 25, 2016
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The rare ‘good guy with a gun’
The National Rifle Association likes to say that “the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is with a good guy with a gun.” This vaporous aphorism, first intoned by NRA leader Wayne LaPierre four years ago, made an appearance this week on the NRA’s Twitter feed -- but it doesn’t quite mean what the NRA thinks.In an attack at a Minnesota mall recently, a knife-wielding assailant was shot dead by a former police chief named Jason Falconer. According to a biography on his company’s website, in addi
Sept. 25, 2016
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[Eric Frazier] Economy makes strides, but Washington needs to do better
Some startlingly good economic news surfaced last week.You missed it? That’s OK. It was easy to overlook economic news amid all the deploring and “pneumonia-ing” and “birther-ing” that made up last week’s episode of the Trump vs. Clinton show.The Census Bureau’s annual report on poverty and income showed that last year, poor and middle-class Americans enjoyed their best year of economic improvement in decades. Real median household income rose to $56,500, a jump of 5.2 percent -- the largest jum
Sept. 25, 2016
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[Robert J. Shiller] The coming anti-national revolution
For the past several centuries, the world has experienced a sequence of intellectual revolutions against oppression of one sort or another. These revolutions operate in the minds of humans and are spread -- eventually to most of the world -- not by war (which tends to involve multiple causes), but by language and communications technology. Ultimately, the ideas they advance -- unlike the causes of war -- become noncontroversial.I think the next such revolution, likely sometime in the 21st centur
Sept. 25, 2016
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[Kailash Satyarthi] The human right that keeps giving
In Ivory Coast, I once met a boy working on a cocoa farm whose only dream was someday to taste the rich brown chocolate he helped produce. And in Pakistan, I once rescued a boy who sewed footballs and wished only to play with the product of his work.In the course of more than three decades of defending children’s rights -- including rescuing tens of thousands of children from bonded labor and slavery, among them little girls who were trafficked from their homeland for sexual exploitation -- I ha
Sept. 23, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Obama offers right ideas for restoration
What a moment for President Obama to deliver his valedictory address to the UN on Tuesday -- defending the liberal international order at a time when it’s under severe stress around the world. Obama’s speech was preceded by some sickening reminders of how global security is fraying: The day before, a Syrian, or perhaps Russian, airstrike had ravaged a UN aid convoy trying to relieve Aleppo; over the weekend, a lone-wolf terrorist had tried to slaughter innocents in the New York area; three days
Sept. 23, 2016
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It’s past time to get serious about Zika
When 21 more people were found infected with the Zika virus in downtown Bangkok recently, state and medical authorities were quick to downplay the news. They should not be so dismissive. This is far too serious an issue. The confirmation raised concern among the public nevertheless that the virus appears to be constantly spreading further. And it added substantial weight to an earlier warning from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control that Thailand is a “red alert” country, a cl
Sept. 22, 2016
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Respect for diversity getting chipped
Minorities are treated like second-class citizens in many corners of the globe. Sexual minorities are among those heavily persecuted in oppressive societies. We would not include Indonesia among them, but it is rapidly getting there. Countries that tend to suffocate their citizens are those that ram selected beliefs and values down people’s throats, and ensure that everyone abides by the rules. Therefore, the oft repeated slogan of respect for diversity is getting increasingly chipped, undermine
Sept. 22, 2016
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[Pook Ah Lek] The dilemma of a bloated foreign workforce
This is the 12th article in a series of columns on global affairs written by top editors from members of the Asia News Network and published in newspapers across the region. -- Ed.No one can tell for sure how many migrant workers we actually have in this country. Even the authorities and individual officials offer their own variable numbers, not so much because they have something to hide from the public but simply no one knows exactly how many of them are here. According to the human resources
Sept. 22, 2016
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Give Libor Some Competition
In 2012, the London interbank offered rate -- Libor -- gained worldwide notoriety when it emerged that traders had conspired to manipulate this vital financial benchmark. Clearly, the system was broken and would have to be mended. Four years later, the repairs aren‘t finished. Given the stakes, regulators are right to tread carefully. That said, they need to start making progress -- not so much toward mending Libor as toward creating an alternative. Libor is constructed by polling banks on the i
Sept. 22, 2016
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[Park Sang-seek] Culture clashes in and between states
After the cold war was over, most people thought the age of conflict had finally ended. But humanity is faced with more conflicts than ever before: Violent conflicts between states have greatly decreased, but nonviolent conflicts between them have not. Within states, regardless of West or the non-West, all kinds of primordial conflicts have increased – perhaps more than ever before. They are racial, religious or sectarian, ethnic, tribal and regional conflicts and disputes. These domestic disput
Sept. 22, 2016
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Everyone needs the oceans to be protected
Most people will never glimpse the vast underwater mountains and canyons off Cape Cod that President Barack Obama designated as a national monument Thursday. The same goes for the hundreds of thousands of submerged square kilometers that the UK, Ecuador, Costa Rica and other countries have just protected, and for the million square kilometers near Hawaii that Obama recently set aside.But everyone benefits when underwater tracts are put off limits to commercial fishing and mining, because doing s
Sept. 21, 2016