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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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
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[Raul S. Hernandez] The way forward on South China Sea dispute
The steady economic growth of the Asia-Pacific has transformed lives and the future of millions of people. The Philippines and the Republic of Korea are part of this evolving story. Yet this region is witnessing profound shifts in its strategic landscape. There are challenges and disputes, which, if not managed wisely, could bring uncertainties to the economic and security environment. One of the most pressing challenges is keeping a predictable and peaceful maritime order, particularly in the
April 24, 2016
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[Gregory Mathieu] Poker's killing the Russian chess star
Among the many weighty questions that Russia’s government has struggled with in recent months -- of war and peace, budget cuts and sanctions -- is this one: Is poker a game of skill or chance?The answer is far from trivial. It will go a long way to determining whether Russia can legalize online poker, and so bring the craze for the game which has swept the nation in recent years within reach of the nation‘s tax collectors. It’s a debate that‘s closely bound up with the fate of Russia’s proud tra
April 24, 2016
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[Noah Smith] Want to fix education? Look at the evidence
In 1974, physicist Richard Feynman derided education research as a form of pseudoscience.He wrote: “I found (pseudoscientific) things that even more people believe, such as that we have some knowledge of how to educate. There are big schools of reading methods and mathematics methods, and so forth, but if you notice, you’ll see the reading scores keep going down. … There’s a witch doctor remedy that doesn’t work. It ought to be looked into: How do they know that their method should work?”Four de
April 24, 2016
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[David Ignatius] A manifesto to mend U.S. politics
It has become a truism to say the American political system is suffering from dysfunction. But weirdly, even the insurgent candidates, Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders, don‘t talk much about how they would fix it. This is a populist insurgency without a clear manifesto.So it’s refreshing to hear Rep. John Sarbanes present a detailed action plan to repair what‘s broken. This proposal isn’t a cure-all. It wouldn‘t fix the immigration problem or fund Social Security or fight terrorism. But by changi
April 24, 2016
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[Robert B. Reich] Benefits of taxing speculation
Why is there so little discussion about one of Bernie Sanders’ most important proposals -- to tax financial speculation?Buying and selling stocks and bonds in order to beat others who are buying and selling stocks and bonds is a giant zero-sum game that wastes countless resources, uses up the talents of some of the nation‘s best and brightest, and subjects financial market to unnecessary risk.High-speed traders who employ advanced technologies in order to get information a millisecond before oth
April 24, 2016
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[Leonid Bershidsky] Merkel’s blunder doesn’t justify Brexit
Advocates of the U.K.’s withdrawal from the European Union have pounced on Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ill-advised decision to allow the prosecution of satirist Jan Boehmermann for an obscene poem about President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey. To them, the German leader has illustrated the unacceptable compromises the European Union’s dysfunctional nature forces nations to accept. That may be right to a degree, but Merkel is walking a domestic tightrope, and she’s beginning to wobble. Earlier t
April 22, 2016
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[Eli Lake] Obama deepens Saudi Arabia ties
The U.S.-Saudi relationship appears to be on the rocks. Most recently, the rift of 9/11 has been reopened. This month “60 Minutes” reported on the still-classified final chapter of a 2003 Senate report on the attacks, which it said would show that some Saudi officials, charities and wealthy individuals supported two of the 9/11 hijackers. The Saudi connection is especially relevant now because Congress is considering legislation to allow the families of 9/11 victims to sue Saudi Arabia for dama
April 22, 2016
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Effective relief for earthquake evacuees
More than 500 earthquakes have occurred since last Thursday, with focuses in Kumamoto and Oita prefectures. Due to fear of aftershocks, over 90,000 people have vacated their homes and are huddled together in evacuation centers.It is important to provide relief and assistance needed by those affected swiftly and surely.Evacuation centers are packed with a greater number of residents than expected by local municipalities, and we see so many cases where it is impossible to accommodate all of them.
April 21, 2016
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[Suthichai Yoon] Fintech replacing regular banks
“I think my successor as central governor will have to have an engineering or computer science degree to cope with this new global trend.”The suggestion was that an economics degree is probably no longer enough for financial and monetary regulators to cope with the coming disruption caused by the onrush of fintech, which threatens to sideswipe the unprepared.Thai central and commercial bankers alike are caught in a new dilemma over how (not whether) to embrace this new technological innovation t
April 21, 2016
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[Rafia Zakaria] Colonial diamonds are not forever
Last November, a group of Indians filed a petition in a British court asking for the return of the famous Kohinoor diamond that sits ensconced in a crown in the Tower of London. The gem was part of the British plunder of the subcontinent, they held, and justice demanded that it be returned.As happens with anything the Indians do, the Pakistanis were not to be left behind. Within a month, a Pakistani barrister filed a petition in a British court, asking for the return of the diamond to Pakistan.
April 21, 2016
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[Jeremy Waldron] A lasting human rights declaration
What responsibility do we have for the world we inhabit? What do we owe one another, and what can we claim from others who share the planet with us? As the world becomes increasingly interconnected, the importance of such global-minded ethical considerations is becoming ever clearer. Indeed, it is imperative for us to begin thinking as global citizens, citizens of the world, even if our first allegiance is to a particular country.That shift in mindset is exactly what the so-called Global Citizen
April 21, 2016
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Cheaper cable TV starts with a better box
Like a lot of Americans, President Barack Obama thinks cable TV costs too much. Unlike a lot of Americans, he is in a position to do something about it — and even if he fails, it’s still worth the effort.Last Friday, Obama took the unusual step of announcing his support for a proposal from the Federal Communications Commission intended to make it easier for customers to purchase their own set-top cable boxes. Whether the idea would actually save consumers money remains to be seen, but it could h
April 21, 2016
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[Kim Hoo-ran] Hallyu should be left unfettered
He is the kind of boy that all girls want to bring home. He is also the kind of young man that all moms want to see their girls bring home. Even President Park Geun-hye wanted him -- he was invited to play host to the president at the recent opening of K-Style Hub, a tourism center in Seoul. Actor Song Joong-ki, the latest Korean pop cultural heartthrob, is the most wanted guy in town. As Army Capt. Yoo Si-jin in the recently concluded KBS2 TV drama series “Descendants of the Sun,” the 30-year-o
April 20, 2016
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[Scott Sherman] Turks see country spiraling into violence
The rumors ricocheting through Istanbul reached us on March 16, when a close Turkish friend urged us to leave the city for the weekend. The next day, my Turkish teacher, as well as the lifeguard at my gym, offered similar warnings. Three days later, at 9:30 a.m., the easygoing young man who delivers hefty plastic jugs of fresh water walked into my kitchen with a week‘s supply. “Will there be trouble in the city today?” I asked him. “Yes,” he instantly replied. “There will be bombs. Stay home.”Tw
April 20, 2016
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[John M. Rodgers] Korea must share dust blame
“It’s China’s fault,” I hear every time smog and yellow dust envelop the Korean Peninsula, which happens all too frequently in spring. So I read Matthew Shapiro’s “Dust in the Wind, Solution in the Lab” (Opinion, April 19) with hopes that a new voice would counter this myopic chorus.Unfortunately, Shapiro fails to mention anything about Korea’s own direct contribution to this combined pollution even though numerous reports in 2015 illustrated the fact that Korea contributes to its own harmful ai
April 20, 2016
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The U.S. government needs to be more open
“There’s classified, and then there’s classified,” President Barack Obama said in a recent interview. Unfortunately, he’s right: The U.S. government classifies vast amounts of material as secret, top secret and the like, much of it with no relevance to national security.This isn’t just a bureaucratic waste of money and a blow to the democratic ideal of government transparency. Overclassification makes the U.S. less secure, in that it distracts intelligence agencies from protecting actual life-an
April 20, 2016
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[Tom Orlik] Good reason for China’s slow reforms
China’s critics are united on one point: The country’s central problem is that it’s moving too slowly to embrace free markets. For now, however, the bigger risk lies in moving too fast.It’s important to remember how China reached this point. For any big economy, coordination poses a steep challenge. The problem is particularly acute at early stages of development, when a combination of poverty and a past record of underperformance mean no one has an incentive to invest.What’s required is a big p
April 20, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Don’t give up on Arabs in search for peace
As President Obama travels this week to Saudi Arabia, here’s a surprising snapshot of what young Arabs think: They’re scared about the Islamic State and terrorism; they yearn for more freedom and gender equality; they fear that the Arab Spring has made life worse; and they’re increasingly skeptical about the role of traditional religious values. If these Arab reactions seem similar to what people would say in the West, maybe that’s the real takeaway. Despite all the violence and extremism that p
April 20, 2016
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Islamic State loses much of its territory
Across Europe, law enforcement authorities scramble to unravel Islamic State terror networks poised to strike against innocent civilians. Progress is fitful, and fear of another attack is high.But on the Iraqi and Syrian battlefields of Islamic State’s self-proclaimed caliphate, better news:-- A loose coalition of forces, backed to varying degrees by the U.S., have reclaimed a huge chunk of Islamic State real estate. The Pentagon now estimates Islamic State has lost at least 40 percent of its te
April 19, 2016
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[Shepherd Iverson] The Kim surrogacy
As part of its annual trade and aid package, Beijing purchases 90 percent of North Korea’s commercial exports and provides the Kim regime with 80 percent of its consumer goods, 90 percent of its energy, over $100 million in U.N. banned luxury goods and enough food to feed over a million people. The $1.2 billion trade deficit with China is considered foreign aid since it is inconceivable it will ever be paid back. However, most money is derived from trade itself.China’s exports to North Korea wer
April 19, 2016