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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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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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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Seoul city opens emergency care centers
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[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
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[Herald Review] 'Gangnam B-Side' combines social realism with masterful suspense, performance
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Why S. Korean refiners are reluctant to import US oil despite Trump’s energy push
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Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
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Prosecutors seek 5-year prison term for Samsung chief in merger retrial
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[William Doyle] Why Finland has the best schools
The Harvard education professor Howard Gardner once advised Americans, “Learn from Finland, which has the most effective schools and which does just about the opposite of what we are doing in the United States.”Following his recommendation, I enrolled my 7-year-old son in a primary school in Joensuu. Finland, which is about as far east as you can go in the European Union before you hit the guard towers of the Russian border.OK, I wasn‘t just blindly following Gardner -- I had a position as a lec
March 24, 2016
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[Ristian Atriandi Supriyanto] Settling a score with China
Alarmist is when you overestimate a strategic risk. Conversely, underestimating that risk is naive. A sound strategic analysis always falls between these two extremes. It’s about maintaining a delicate balance between appreciating and courting danger. The latest incident between China and Indonesia near the Natuna Islands incurs the risk of underestimating Indonesia’s strategic impotence against Beijing’s growing maritime assertiveness. When China published its “nine-dash,” or U-shaped line, ma
March 24, 2016
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Brussels violence unabated, yet nothing gained
The world has once again been shaken by another deadly terrorist attack on innocent people. This time the target was Brussels, where at least 31 people were killed and 230 others injured Tuesday. The suspected suicide bombers struck the Belgian capital’s Zaventem airport as well as a metro station about 200 meters from European Commission headquarters. The Islamic State group later claimed responsibility. It is widely seen as “an attack on all of Europe,” since Brussels is home to key institut
March 24, 2016
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Authors and ‘unfreedom’
To an extent, a book, in whatever the language in which it is crafted, can be a matter of subjective reflection; it is up to the reader or critic to draw conclusions. The Indian Human Resource Development Ministry’s latest move is testament to what Amartya Sen has famously described as the spread of “unfreedom.” While facts are meant to be garnered, interpretation is free. As much was the underlying theme of the pedagogy of the late Ashin Das Gupta, one of the finest teachers of history at Pre
March 24, 2016
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Divorce and death
At the second presidential debate sanctioned by the Commission on Elections and held in Cebu on March 20, the candidates were asked to answer three questions without explanation, simply by raising their hands if they were in favor and keeping still if they were against. It was a made-for-TV format, but the exercise proved to be a welcome respite from the often heated exchanges that characterized the debate. The up-or-down format used by TV5 was also a helpful guide to the candidates’ views on lo
March 24, 2016
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[Choi He-suk] Journalism’s thin yellow line
There is apparently this mysterious line that one is simply not meant to cross. Anyone who crosses this line is simply wrong — or so say those enforcing this line.For publications that want to be considered respectable, crossing this line means dabbling in yellow journalism. But this line is being crossed willingly and frequently by local media. Everyday big and small media outlets churn out articles with catchy headlines that are sometimes accompanied by photographs that are only fit to be post
March 23, 2016
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[David Ignatius] The dark path to Brussels terror attacks
The value of catastrophic events is that they can help people face up to problems that are otherwise impossible to address. Maybe this will be the case with Tuesday’s horrific attacks in Brussels.Europe is facing a security threat that’s unprecedented in its modern history, at a time when its common currency, border security and intelligence-sharing are all under severe stress. If Europe were a stock, a pragmatic investor would sell it, despite the sunk cost and sentimental attachment. Without r
March 23, 2016
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[James Gibney] Switching status of Cuba and Puerto Rico
President Barack Obama dangles U.S. dollars before the Castros while Congress stonewalls Puerto Rico’s pleas for debt restructuring. The Tampa Bay Rays take the field in Havana as San Juan fends off New York hedge funds wielding legal baseball bats. The Rolling Stones play a free concert for Cubans; Puerto Rico can’t get no satisfaction. As Cuba rises and Puerto Rico falls, it’s worth considering the diverging trajectories of these two ex-Spanish colonies that the Puerto Rican poet Lola Rodrigue
March 22, 2016
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[Carl P. Leubsdorf] Trump’s chances of being elected
Hardly a week goes by when an old friend doesn’t contact me with the same question: Could Donald Trump really get elected president?My standard reply is that, at this point, there are two answers: “Yes,” and “Probably not.” Never say never.By all logic, the blustery billionaire has antagonized enough voters that, even if he attracts disaffected white Democrats, he’ll have a difficult time winning a general election. A substantial proportion of Republicans says they won’t support him, even if he
March 22, 2016
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[Kim Seong-kon] The last time I saw Paris
I have just returned from a trip to Paris, where South Korea was invited as the guest of honor country at the 2016 Paris International Book Fair.I traveled with 30 Korean writers to the book fair for a series of literary events. Anne Hidalgo, the mayor of Paris, hosted a welcoming reception for us and French President Francois Hollande visited the Korean Pavilion to pay his respects to the guest of honor country, as did the French minister of culture. The 30 Korean writers enjoyed enormous popul
March 22, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Signs of progress against extremists in Syria
Moderate Syrian opposition forces claim they are strengthening their positions against extremists in northern and southern Syria as the Russian military withdraws and a fragile cease-fire takes hold with the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.Two rebel commanders described the recent battlefield gains against the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra in telephone interviews Saturday. Their claims couldn’t be verified, and it’s too early to say whether the moderate opposition is truly expanding its
March 22, 2016
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[Lee Jae-min] Peace treaty has its complications
A peace treaty is being mentioned in the course of exploring an ultimate solution to the military confrontation on the Korean Peninsula. It has been suggested that a peace treaty would tame North Korea by replacing the current armistice agreement and officially ending hostilities in the region.China supports the idea of pursuing denuclearization and a peace treaty in parallel. The U.S. position has been that denuclearization should be a prerequisite for any meaningful discussion of a peace treat
March 22, 2016
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[Noah Smith] U.S. companies, try this: Raise your minimum pay
Recently, McDonald’s decided to raise wages for many of its hourly restaurant workers. The rise is modest, from about $9 to about $10, but already the company’s executives claim that they are seeing improvements in service quality: “It has done what we expected it to -- 90-day turnover rates are down, our survey scores are up -- we have more staff in restaurants,” McDonald’s U.S. president Mike Andres told analysts at a UBS conference. “So far we’re pleased with it.” So far the company’s financi
March 21, 2016
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Cheating for Olympic gold
Athletes competing in the ancient Olympic games were venerated for their prowess and ability. Here, on these original Olympiad grounds of now toppled temples and former glory, visitors are reminded of the elevated role honor played within competition.Two thousand years ago, competitors heading toward the stadium tunnel walked between two rows of statues. On their right was a famous marble row of heroic athletes, victors all. On the left, however, stood 16 statues of Olympic cheaters, eternally d
March 21, 2016
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President Dilma Rousseff mocks Brazilian justice
President Dilma Rousseff has responded to the Brazilian public’s increasingly loud cry for greater accountability by mocking it. Her blatant attempt to protect her predecessor from prosecution will not end well -- for her or Brazil. On Thursday, a federal judge blocked the appointment of former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as Rousseff’s chief of staff, where, as a cabinet minister, he would have been shielded from probes by all but the Supreme Court. The judge argued that it would put the
March 21, 2016
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[Robert B. Reich] The truth about free trade
Both Bernie Sanders and Donald Trump are blaming free-trade deals for the decline of working-class jobs and incomes. Are they right?Clearly, America has lost a significant number of factory jobs over the last three decades. In 1980, about 1 in 5 Americans worked in manufacturing. Now it‘s about 1 in 12.Today, Ohio has a third fewer manufacturing jobs than it had in 2000. Michigan is down 32 percent.Trade isn’t the only culprit. Technological change has also played a part.When I visit one of Amer
March 21, 2016
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[Tobin Harshaw] Putin's Syria gamble has already paid off
Vladimir Putin says he is withdrawing most Russian forces from Syria because his “objectives” have been achieved. How to judge that boast? On such goals as keeping the dictator Bashar Assad in power, increasing Russian influence in the Middle East, restoring Moscow’s seat at the table of global power, and sending a message of strength to Islamic extremists inside Russia‘s own borders, the jury is still out. But it’s not too early to consider Russian success on another front: showcasing military
March 21, 2016
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[David Ignatius] The mistaken attack on free trade
Of the many dangerous trends in the 2016 election, the revolt against free trade that has captured both parties could do the most long-term damage. That’s because protectionism would undermine future growth of the U.S. economy and subvert America’s role as global leader. Globalization has undeniably hurt some American workers and cost some manufacturing jobs. But there’s strong evidence that trade has benefited the U.S. economy and created whole new industries in which America is dominant. That’
March 21, 2016
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[Joseph E. Stiglitz ] The new generation gap
Something interesting has emerged in voting patterns on both sides of the Atlantic: Young people are voting in ways that are markedly different from their elders. A great divide appears to have opened up, based not so much on income, education, or gender as on the voters’ generation. There are good reasons for this divide. The lives of both old and young, as they are now lived, are different. Their pasts are different, and so are their prospects. The Cold War, for example, was over even before s
March 20, 2016
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[Asina Pornwasin] Variety of Internet scams on the rise
While Internet accessibility in Asia continues to expand across tech devices and platforms, so too are the ways Internet scams infiltrate consumers’ personal information. Work from home fraud, Internet auction scams and fake bank email scams are the top three scams in Asia, according to Telenor Group’s recent Internet scams study. The multimarket survey assessed the impact of scams on 400 Internet users aged 18 up to over 65 in Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and India, and was conducted to provi
March 20, 2016