Articles by 김케빈도현
김케빈도현
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[Kim Seong-Kon] The difficulty of ‘justice for all’
Recently two incidents caught my eye. One is the publication of “The Story of Hong Gildong” by Penguin, adding a Korean title to the celebrated Penguin Classics. The other is the Go match between a human and a machine, which turned out to be a victory of artificial intelligence over the human mind at first, and then human victory over the computer. The two memorable events incidentally made me brood over the question: “What is justice?” Hong Gildong resembles Robin Hood in the sense that as th
Viewpoints March 15, 2016
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Japan’s careful return to nuclear power
Five years after the nuclear plant meltdown at Fukushima, Japan has begun the controversial process of restarting its other reactors. The challenge for government and industry remains no less critical, however, to continually improve safety, lest they further undermine public support for what should be a reliable, climate-friendly fuel source.Before Fukushima led the government to close all the country’s reactors, Japan got almost 30 percent of its electricity from nuclear. Now it’s importing ab
Viewpoints March 15, 2016
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Here’s why budget airlines aren’t less safe
One hundred and fifty — that’s how many lives were lost when Germanwings 9525 crashed into the French Alps a year ago this month. In the immediate aftermath, concerns were raised about safety in the budget-travel industry, concerns that some analysts were quick to dismiss. “When you pay less at a budget airline, you do get what you pay for; it’s just less in terms of frills and customer service, not less in terms of safety,” opined one expert. Statistics seemingly agree, showing no difference in
Viewpoints March 15, 2016
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[Robert J. Fouser] The end of free trade?
The debate on trade in the U.S. presidential election should concern Korea because trade has come under fire from the left and right. On the left, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders blames the North American Free Trade Agreement and other bad trade policies for the loss of manufacturing jobs and stagnant wages that have weakened the middle class. Sanders has emerged as a strong challenger to frontrunner Hillary Clinton. On the right, businessman Donald Trump has attacked the same agreement and policie
Viewpoints March 15, 2016
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[Raphael Hadas-Lebel] France’s move to limit citizenship over terror
Since last November’s brutal terrorist attacks in Paris, a furious debate has been raging in France over whether to revoke the citizenship of those convicted of terrorist offenses. While that move would have significant symbolic value, it would have a limited practical impact. Yet vehement disagreements over the issue continue to drown out discussion of far more consequential topics, like anemic economic growth and high unemployment — and will likely continue to do so.The citizenship issue was i
Viewpoints March 14, 2016
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Don’t shoot the messenger
The case of Bangladesh’s Daily Star editor Mahfuz Anam becomes more and more curious. What began as theatre of the absurd is starting to look increasingly sinister. Anam, publisher and editor of the country’s leading daily, in a moment of introspection during a TV talk show last month, confessed to professional impropriety in printing leaks from military intelligence in 2007 under the army-backed caretaker government. The leaks contained unverified information alleging corruption by current Prim
Viewpoints March 14, 2016
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[Bernard-Henri Levy] The world according to the Trump phenomenon
The word “trump,” according to the dictionary, is an alteration of the word triumph. And because Donald Trump, the U.S. presidential candidate, appears likely to become the nominee of the Grand Old Party of Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan, we owe it to ourselves to ask in what sense and for whom he represents a triumph.One thinks of a segment of the American population angered by the eight years of Barack Obama’s presidency, a group that is now feeling vengeful. And one also thinks of the whit
Viewpoints March 14, 2016
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[Ingrid Newkirk] Why this feminist would ‘rather go naked’
Is it odd that a feminist like me, from back in the bra-burning ’60s, champions racy protests featuring women wearing little more than body-paint markings that mimic a butcher’s diagram? Some might raise an eyebrow, but this March, National Women’s History Month, let me explain why I believe that supporting women’s rights and stripping for a cause go together like Gloria Steinem and miniskirts.With feminism, as with all social movements, each generation has its own battles to fight, and while re
Viewpoints March 14, 2016
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[David Ignatius] Syria diplomacy’s biggest surprise
The head of the Syrian opposition says he’s going to Geneva for the next round of U.S.-Russian-sponsored peace talks Monday, even though the opposition rejects any future role for President Bashar al-Assad, whose regime will be the other party in the talks.The Syria diplomacy might be described as “the art of the impossible,” borrowing the title of a collection of speeches by former Czech president Vaclav Havel, who helped negotiate the transition from communism to democracy in Eastern Europe. S
Viewpoints March 14, 2016
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[Noah Smith] Picking up where Abenomics left off
If there’s one country that needs creative economic policy solutions, it’s Japan. With many observers saying Abenomics has stalled after a year of weak economic performance, plenty of people are asking what’s next -- or has Japan run out of ideas?The backdrop doesn’t look great. The country is experiencing an unprecedented decline in population. The national debt is mounting. Wages are falling, consumption is depressed and productivity is still stagnating. China, Japan’s biggest trading partners
Viewpoints March 13, 2016
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[Mark Gilbert] Banking faces an existential crisis
Who would choose to be a banker these days? Your colleagues are disappearing at an alarming rate as your business shrinks. The regulators don’t want you doing anything exciting. The public despises you.And that’s only the beginning of your problems. The central banks are killing even your most plain vanilla activities with their interest-rate policies. Every quarter, your industry hands over another couple of billion dollars in fines for previous indiscretions and market rigging. Something calle
Viewpoints March 13, 2016
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[Stephen L. Carter] A computer wins at Go, and this human is disappointed
Put away your worries about how all the major presidential contenders have abandoned a bipartisan consensus on trade, or whether any serious financial instrument will ever again earn serious interest. In Seoul, a genuine tragedy for the human race is taking place.AlphaGo is winning. The computer, developed by artificial intelligence researchers at Google, has won the first two games in its five-game match with Lee Se-dol, one of the world’s best players of the game Go. The chances of a comeback
Viewpoints March 13, 2016
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[Ranil Wickremesinghe] Trade in time of protectionism
As China’s economy slows and growth in the developed world remains anemic, governments across Asia are working to keep their economies on an upward trajectory. In Sri Lanka, where I am prime minister, the challenge is to find a way to accelerate our already steady economic growth.One thing is clear: We cannot expect the rest of the world to welcome our economic ambitions the way it once opened its arms to China’s rapid rise as an economic power or -- in earlier decades -- cheered on the growth o
Viewpoints March 13, 2016
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[David Ignatius] America’s political decay and rise of Trump
Good countries can sometimes go bad. Donald Trump’s supporters implicitly make this argument when they proclaim “Make America Great Again.” And so do those who loathe Trump and see in him a dangerous populist response to the anger of frustrated middle-class voters.The rise of Trump, love him or hate him, conveys an inescapable message: America’s political institutions are in decay, and voters are angry at a government that they perceive (correctly) to be broken. The danger is that Trump’s respon
Viewpoints March 13, 2016
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[Chon Shi-yong] Two early stars of general elections
General elections used to produce stars, like the youngest successful candidate, underdogs who defeated big-name politicians or figures who won on enemy turf. We will have to wait until April 13 to find out who will become the stars of the 20th National Assembly. But in terms of public and media attention, there are already two star players: Kim Jong-in, the stopgap leader of The Minjoo Party of Korea, and Lee Hahn-koo, the nomination chief of the Saenuri Party. Since taking over at their respec
Viewpoints March 10, 2016
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