Articles by Yu Kun-ha
Yu Kun-ha
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A new Korean player on L.A. Dodgers
Recently, there has been great excitement within the baseball community here in Korea with regards to the possible MLB acquisition of Ryu Hyun-jin, a southpaw who throws for the KBO’s Hanwha Eagles. It comes as no surprise, then, that the organization on the other end that is interested is the Los Angeles Dodgers, who, given their long history, have a proud tradition of welcoming new talent across cultural divides into the Big Leagues. Beginning in 1947, with the signing of Jackie Robinson, and
Viewpoints Nov. 18, 2012
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[Andrew Sheng] Trouble of writing rules for unknown unknowns
Traveling to Traverse City by Lake Michigan in the U.S. in cold, rainy October, serendipity struck in funny ways. In a bookshop next door to the renovated Art Deco State Theatre movie-house run by the film director Mike Moore, I picked up a 2010 book by the Serbian physicist Vlatko Vedral, “Decoding Reality,” which sees the world through the lens of quantum information. I read the book in Boston, right in the midst of Hurricane Sandy as it tore through the East Coast of the U.S., demonstrating t
Viewpoints Nov. 18, 2012
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The French view of the Petraeus sex scandal
PARIS ― French public reaction to American CIA Director Gen. David Petraeus’ suicide-bombing of his own career demonstrates a lack of understanding of the perceived offense in favor of a blind defense of libertinism. It was learned last week that Petraeus had an extramarital affair with his biographer, reserve Army officer Paula Broadwell (who, like Petraeus, is married with children).Let’s go back in time for some context.The French never understood why President Bill Clinton was impeached for
Viewpoints Nov. 16, 2012
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[Robert B. Reich] Game of economic chicken
With the election behind us, I had hoped our politicians would get beyond games of chicken. No such luck.First, you need to understand that the upcoming game of chicken isn’t about how much or when we cut the budget deficit, or even whether the upcoming “fiscal cliff” poses a danger to the economy.The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office warned last week that the automatic tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to start in January amount to too much deficit reduction, too soon. They’d put
Viewpoints Nov. 16, 2012
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[David Ignatius] A warrior’s star tarnished
WASHINGTON ― David Petraeus achieved genuinely great things in his career, so his fall as CIA director over what he bluntly described in his resignation letter Friday as “extremely poor judgment ... engaging in an extramarital affair” has the poignancy you might find in a novel by Leo Tolstoy or Victor Hugo. Petraeus may have seemed larger than life in uniform, but beneath the ribbons he was a very human story.Petraeus’ 14-month tenure as CIA director was short and, compared to his rocket-like a
Viewpoints Nov. 15, 2012
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[Masahiro Matsumura] U.S.-Japan ties: Oki-now-what?
OSAKA ― Japan’s alliance with the United States is widely viewed as a crucial counterweight to China’s hegemonic ambitions, which pose significant threats to Asian security. But, although the United States and Japan are conducting joint naval exercises in the East China Sea in order to signal to China that it should tone down its actions over the disputed Senkaku Islands, all is not well with the alliance.Controversy over the deployment by the U.S. Marines of 12 tilt-rotor V-22 Osprey aircraft t
Viewpoints Nov. 15, 2012
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[Editorial] Brakes on Jeju base
The main opposition Democratic United Party has again put the brakes on the construction of a naval base on Jeju Island. The party has refused to pass a bill allocating 200 billion won for the project next year through the National Defense Committee of the National Assembly. It demanded that the entire budget be axed.Behind the party’s nonsensical move was its presidential candidate Moon Jae-in. A week ago, he visited Jeju and told opponents to the project that if elected president, he would hal
Editorial Nov. 14, 2012
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[Editorial] Timing for reform
Park Geun-hye, the ruling Saenuri Party’s presidential candidate, has toned down her party’s chaebol reform proposals. She has, among other things, rejected a plan to penalize existing circular shareholding arrangements among chaebol affiliates. Her decision was prudent but drew fire from opposition presidential runners.Circular shareholdings are high on the economic democratization agendas of the three main presidential contenders, who include, along with Park, Moon Jae-in of the main oppositio
Editorial Nov. 14, 2012
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[Robert Shiller] A president without a plan
NEW HAVEN ― During the United States’ recent presidential election campaign, public-opinion polls consistently showed that the economy ― and especially unemployment ― was voters’ number one concern. The Republican challenger, Mitt Romney, sought to capitalize on the issue, asserting: “The president’s plans haven’t worked ― he doesn’t have a plan to get the economy going.”Nonetheless, Barack Obama was reelected. The outcome may reflect the economy’s slight improvement at election time (as happene
Viewpoints Nov. 14, 2012
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Time to reconsider Korean management style
It’s no question that Koreans work more hours than in any other country in the world. However, in terms of management efficiency they are ranked among the lowest. What could possibly be the reason for such inefficiency? Is it Confucianism ― employees looking back, embracing tradition and refusing to adapt to a changing world? Is it their military training in which all men are required to dedicate nearly two years of their lives? I believe that it is a combination of both that creates a business
Viewpoints Nov. 14, 2012
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A student’s plea for someone to comfort him
When a student of mine called me to ask for some advice, I listened calmly, expecting him to inquire about his grades or request that I look over one of his essays. Instead, his dilemma was a rather unique one. He had decided to apply to Swarthmore, a top-ranked liberal arts school in America, and wanted to submit a rock album that he had been recording but that was still incomplete. Not only was his counselor against the student’s decision to apply to Swarthmore, insisting that his scores were
Viewpoints Nov. 14, 2012
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Right-leaning Japan relives 19th century
Japan’s leaders just can’t seem to put the 19th century behind them. It may be 2012, and the world surrounding this island nation of 126 million is changing at a blistering pace, but Japanese officialdom seems oddly stuck in the late 1800s. Back then, reformers adopted the slogan “rich nation, strong army.” This rabid nationalism culminated, of course, in World War II and a crushing defeat. Fast-forward a hundred years or so. Here is the hauntingly similar motto Shinzo Abe, very possibly Japan’s
Viewpoints Nov. 13, 2012
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[Lee Jae-min] The naming season again?
Imagine someone whose name changes every five years. Confusion would reign for a while, to say the least. In Korea, changing a person’s name even requires an approval from the court. Situations in other countries are not that different.Check this out: It was 1993 when the Ministry of Trade and Industry, and the Ministry of Energy and Resources were merged to become the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (known as “MOTIE”). In 1998, the ministry’s name was changed as the Ministry of Commerce,
Viewpoints Nov. 13, 2012
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The political inevitability of immigration reform
Having helped power President Barack Obama to victory over Mitt Romney, Hispanic voters are suddenly the “it” demographic in U.S. politics. Hispanics made up 10 percent of the total vote and gave Obama almost three votes for every one earned by Romney. Obama may even have won a majority among Florida’s Cuban voters, who were once a Republican mainstay. With more than 60,000 Hispanics turning 18 every month between now and 2016, we doubt many Republicans are still in denial about the demographic
Viewpoints Nov. 12, 2012
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[David Ignatius] Obama’s foreign policy test
WASHINGTON ― On foreign policy, President Obama effectively posted a sign on the White House lawn last summer that said: Come back after Election Day. Now, the moment has arrived and the world’s problems are lining up for Obama’s attention. To manage the global problems coming at him, Obama will have to make decisions of the sort he sometimes deferred during his first term. The time is over for the cautious (if often sensible) approach that was dubbed “leading from behind.” Here’s a look at some
Viewpoints Nov. 12, 2012
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