Articles by Yu Kun-ha
Yu Kun-ha
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Kim Jong-il, Vaclav Havel: Two leaders a world apart
According to his obituary in the Los Angeles Times, North Korean strongman Kim Jong-il hired a personal sushi chef from Tokyo and a personal pizza chef from Italy even as his country suffered through a famine that killed as many as 2 million of his people. He kept a library of 20,000 movies for his own entertainment although ordinary citizens could be sent to prison camps for watching South Korean or American movies. He beat back economic reforms and led North Korea’s economy to the brink of col
Viewpoints Dec. 22, 2011
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Endorse the nuclear test ban
STOCKHOLM/MEXICO CITY ― Indonesia’s parliament has just taken a historic step, one that makes the planet safer from the threat of nuclear weapons. The importance of Indonesia’s decision to ratify the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty cannot be overstated. This is a golden opportunity for the remaining eight countries to endorse the CTBT, enabling it to come into legal effect.For the five decades following World War II, a nuclear test shook and irradiated the planet on average every nine days
Viewpoints Dec. 22, 2011
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N. Korea: Absurd, cruel, tragic and dangerous
As if the world did not face enough uncertainty at the end of 2011, we received the news on Sunday night that North Korea’s Kim Jong-il died. As is common for the sadly surreal nation, the information came wrapped up in confusing and absurd non-details, with reports indicating the 69-year-old died of exhaustion on a train.North Korea, and the newly defunct Kim of the sinister Kim dynasty, have given comedians much to joke about. And they have sparked a great deal of creativity among intelligence
Viewpoints Dec. 21, 2011
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[Robert Reich] The real cost of Wall Street
Wall Street is its own worst enemy. It should have welcomed new financial regulation as a means of restoring public trust. Instead, it’s busily shredding new regulations and making the public more distrustful than ever.The Street’s biggest lobbying groups have just filed a lawsuit against the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, seeking to overturn its new rule limiting speculative trading in food, oil and other commodities.The Street makes bundles from these bets, but they have raised costs
Viewpoints Dec. 21, 2011
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Exploiting Kim’s death for diplomatic goal
North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il drove his country deep into starvation and isolation while stockpiling cognac and fine foods for himself and his friends. He also threatened the world with a growing nuclear arsenal.He won’t be missed.Now Kim’s youngest son, Kim Jong-un, a 20-something cipher with no military experience and a four-star general’s rank, steps onto the stage.There’s speculation that the untested Kim will provoke a crisis to prove his chops and rally the military around his fledglin
Viewpoints Dec. 21, 2011
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North Korea isn’t less of an enigma after Kim
The premature death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il leaves behind a Shakespearean cast of characters who may not play the roles the late dictator had assigned to them.Kim may have had a stroke in 2008, but his health more recently seemed stable. Observers felt his third son, Kim Jong-un, designated 15 months ago as the heir-apparent, would likely have several years to grow into the role.Instead, the elder Kim’s death at age 69, reportedly from a heart attack, now means the rest of the world,
Viewpoints Dec. 21, 2011
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[Daniel Fiedler] Slander and coffee shop gossip
Korean slander law is surprisingly different from that of the United States, and surprisingly easy to violate. In both countries the underlying rationale is to prevent defamatory statements about an individual being made to a third party. However, that is where the similarity ends and the differences begin. While in the United States the elements of slander will vary depending on the public nature of the individual and the information, the offense is, at its simplest, the oral communication of a
Viewpoints Dec. 20, 2011
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Twitter a reason for optimism on North Korea
May Day 1979. Kim Il-sung Square, Pyongyang, North Korea.Some 50,000 of my closest Korean friends and I thronged the plaza as dancers of all ages, dressed in traditional joseon-ot of many colors, swayed and swung to ancient Korean folk tunes.The international holiday for workers was celebrated in what was then ― and today even more so ― one of the last bastions of communism in the world.In one circle of 50 or so people, I clung to the hand of a pretty young woman as we spun round like Ferris whe
Viewpoints Dec. 20, 2011
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A wrong turn in terror fight
The White House said last week that President Obama will sign a controversial $662 billion defense authorization that permits indefinite detention without trial for some terrorism suspects and broadens the authorization for the use of force against people and groups “associated” with al-Qaida anywhere in the world. It’s the wrong choice.The bill, which passed the House Wednesday and the Senate on Thursday, is being advertised as a compromise with the administration, and indeed it includes provis
Viewpoints Dec. 20, 2011
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Engaging the new North Korean hermit-in-chief
With the death of Kim Jong-il, the world is both a better and a more dangerous place. Better, because over his nearly two-decade rule of North Korea, Kim Jong-il killed or brutalized millions of his countrymen, illicitly spread nuclear technology and stoked regional tension and conflict. More dangerous, because Kim’s heir apparent, his son Kim Jong-un, is untested and unknown. Rumor has it that Kim Jong-un likes American basketball and expensive sneakers. He may be 28, or he may be 29. He may sp
Viewpoints Dec. 20, 2011
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Kim makes world scary place even in death
If there is a reason famous people die in threes, imagine the lively debates Vaclav Havel, Kim Jong-il and Christopher Hitchens are having in eternity’s waiting room. Havel had long been on the Nobel Peace Prize short list for his role in bringing democracy to Czechoslovakia and central Europe. Were there an award for the opposite feat, destabilizing the world and playing a role in the deaths of millions, North Korean leader Kim would win easily. And the indefatigable Hitchens would be there to
Viewpoints Dec. 20, 2011
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America Inc. must fight and live with China hackers
Chinese hackers have redefined the concept of room service: In one recent attack, they infiltrated an Internet service provider to some of the world’s leading hotels, potentially gaining access to millions of confidential messages of traveling executives, as well as to the victims’ corporate networks. The electronic theft of proprietary information from U.S. companies has reached the level of grand larceny on a national scale. One declassified government estimate put the value of information sto
Viewpoints Dec. 19, 2011
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Bank reform needs unlimited liability for owners
Any discussion of financial regulation and its chronic failures should start with a simple, jarring truth: It’s impossible to outregulate a banker. Each crisis in the financial sector brings calls for new rules, which take hold after much political jostling. Then we are supposed to sleep easier, certain that this time we are protected. We never are. Fresh rules are like antibodies, and banking ― much like viruses ― keeps evolving to outwit the regulations. Financial incentives tilt hugely in ban
Viewpoints Dec. 19, 2011
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Punish overspending European leaders
I’ve had it with this useless, ongoing charade to “save Europe.” It’s time to get serious and consider jailing and impeaching some of these European Union member leaders for requisite incentive.Last week’s EU show was pathetic. It made me throw a pack of gummy bears at my television screen. You’d think these European leaders were actually in a position to save others when they can’t even save themselves as their own countries drown in debt.As every trained water rescuer knows, when faced with a
Viewpoints Dec. 19, 2011
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[David Ignatius] Time to unveil the vision thing
WASHINGTON ― It’s telling that nearly three years into the Obama presidency, so many conversations with administration officials still begin with a litany of how bad things were under George W. Bush, to wit: The Obama team faced two foreign wars, an aggressive al-Qaida, a deep mistrust among allies, a shaken U.S. economy. They inherited a world of woe. And now? Obama officials recite their catechism of successes. Osama bin Laden is dead and al-Qaida is on the run; the troops are back from Iraq a
Viewpoints Dec. 18, 2011
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