Eleventh President of South Korea
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Đi lên từ vụ truy tố cựu tổng thống Park Geun Hye, ông Yoon vụt sáng thành ngôi sao chính trị, trước khi đối diện khủng hoảng tín nhiệm và quyết định thiết quân luật gây tranh cãi.
Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1120, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Bruce Willis Movie Quotes 1: "Sorry, Hans. Wrong guess. Would you like to go for Double Jeopardy!, where the scores can really change?". Die Hard. 2: "Dead people, like, in graves... in coffins?". The Sixth Sense. 3: "Zed's dead, baby. Zed's dead". Pulp Fiction. 4: "If you pull that trigger, that bullet is just gonna bounce off me and I'm not going to be hurt". Unbreakable. 5: "Scientists. I'm supposed to report in to them. They'll want to know they sent me to the wrong time". 12 Monkeys. Round 2. Category: Female World Leaders 1: Her husband's assassination and a People Power Revolution made her president in 1986. (Corazon) Aquino. 2: PM Johanna Sigurdardottir of this Atlantic island country is the world's first openly gay head of govt.. Iceland. 3: The daughter of a president who was assassinated, Park Geun-Hye is the president of this country. South Korea. 4: Dame Louise Lake-Tack is governor general of Antigua and this geographic partner. Barbuda. 5: Vigdis Finnbogadottir was president of this country for almost the entire 1980s. Iceland. Round 3. Category: Midway 1: The nearly extinct Hawaiian species of this mammal uses Midway's beaches to breed. a seal. 2: An order signed on Oct. 31, 1996 transferred Midway from the Navy to this cabinet dept.. Interior. 3: In 1935 this airline built a prefab hotel on Midway as a rest stop for passengers flying on its China Clippers. Pan Am. 4: Midway is home to the world's largest colony of the Laysan species of this "wandering" sea bird. the albatross. 5: In the 1950's and '60s Midway was home to crews who flew radar aircraft in this Cold War detection line. the DEW line. Round 4. Category: Politics Talk 1: Sen. Robert Byrd said the survival of our constitutional system is based on "the delicate mechanism of" this pair. checks and balances. 2: It's the group from one state at a convention; at the 2020 DNC, California's was 494 strong. a delegation. 3: Type of post-election election that involved the two men here in December 2022. a runoff. 4: The first time Congress did this to a president was to lame duck John Tyler on March 3, 1845. the first time a veto was overridden. 5: From the name of a D.C. location where many lobbying firms are concentrated, this "Street" is shorthand for lobbyists. K Street. Round 5. Category: Where Ya Been? 1: Strolling through the National Gallery of Australia in this capital. Canberra. 2: Climbing Mount Aconcagua in this Western Hemisphere mountain range. the Andes. 3: Tracking my stocks on the Hang Seng index of this former Crown colony's stock exchange. Hong Kong. 4: Chopping down trees in Moose Jaw and Saskatoon in this province. Saskatchewan. 5: Carefully paddling down this Congolese river that lends its name to a deadly virus. Ebola. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used
Happy Monday! While traveling, I've pre-recorded this podcast in advance of this week's Samsung Unpacked event. A bit serious and a bit tongue in cheek, here's how I transitioned from die-hard Samsung Knight to insufferable hater. I often pick on the most toxic members of a brand's fandom, but I haven't done a great job of explaining how I got here. Let's get our tech week started right! Links mentioned in this podcast! 1999 – 2006 Price Fixing LCDs https://www.cnet.com/home/smart-home/lcd-makers-fined-388-million-for-alleged-price-fixing/ 2012 – LG Samsung and carriers caught price fixing phones in Korea https://techcrunch.com/2012/03/15/samsung-lg-korean-carriers-fined-for-mobile-price-fixing-scheme/ 2012 – Apple CopyCat IP lawsuits https://bgr.com/general/samsung-young-sohn-interview-apple/ 2013 – Samsung Astroturfing fake negative reviews of HTC devices https://www.ibtimes.com/samsung-caught-astroturfing-taiwanese-ftc-fines-galaxy-s4-maker-340000-fake-negative-reviews-htc#:~:text=Jan.%207%2C%202013.%20REUTERS%2FRICK%20WILKING%20The%20Fair%20Trade,practice%20of%20disguising%20sponsored%20messages%20as%20disinterested%20reviews. 2013 – Note 3 Caught Inflating Benchmark scores https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2013/10/galaxy-note-3s-benchmarking-adjustments-inflate-scores-by-up-to-20/ 2013 – Samsung Fined in Taiwan for Misleading Ads https://techcrunch.com/2013/01/10/samsung-fined-by-taiwans-fair-trade-commission-for-misleading-advertising/ 2013 – Presidential candidate Park Geun Hye backs off Samsung during election, is elected president of South Korea https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/tax-evasion-bribery-and-pricefixing-how-samsung-became-the-giant-that-ate-korea-8510588.html 2014 – Vanity Fair Article on Abuse, Collusion, Price Fixing, IP theft from Samsung (covers MULTIPLE instances of abuses) https://www.vanityfair.com/news/business/2014/06/apple-samsung-smartphone-patent-war 2014 – EU fines Samsung Royal Philips, and Infineon for price fixing “Chip Cartel” https://www.livemint.com/Companies/nAhxZr7GXLWqkF7iqUi3iL/Samsung-Philips-said-to-face-EU-fines-on-smart-card-chip-ca.html 2017 – President Park impeached for bribery and corruption charges involving Samsung and Lee Jae Young https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-49507401 2018 – Samsung sued over labor conditions https://phys.org/news/2018-01-french-groups-sue-samsung-alleged.html 2018 – Samsung Class Action for Price Fixing RAM https://topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/lawsuit-news/samsung-class-action-lawsuit-alleges-dram-price-fixing-scheme/ 2018 – Samsung Fined in Italy for Slowing Phones similar to Apple battery throttling over updateshttps://www.androidpolice.com/2018/10/24/samsung-fined-italy-forcing-phone-slowing-updates-users/ https://en.agcm.it/en/media/detail?id=385e274c-8dc3-4911-9b8c-9771c854193a&parent=Press%20Releases&parentUrl=/en/media/press-releases 2019 – Report published on Samsung collusion with local police in Chennai, impersonating police, intimidating journalists https://english.hani.co.kr/arti/english_edition/e_international/899620.html 2019 – Australia Fines Samsung over Water Resistance Claims https://www.reuters.com/article/us-australia-samsung-elec-regulator-idINKCN1TZ0EJhttps://www.abc.net.au/news/2022-06-23/samsung-fined-14-million-water-resistance-galaxy-smartphones/101178818 2020 – Samsung Pay Lets You Opt Out of Selling Your Data to Third Parties https://www.androidcentral.com/samsung-pay-now-lets-you-opt-out-selling-your-data-third-parties 2020 – Samsung services sent user data to Chinese servers https://android.gadgethacks.com/how-to/prevent-samsungs-shady-360-storage-cleaner-from-phoning-home-china-0225941/ https://piunikaweb.com/2020/01/08/samsung-galaxy-phones-come-preinstalled-with-potential-spyware-from-chinas-qihoo-360/ 2020 – Samsung complies with Russian law to force pre-installing government approved apps on phones https://www.rferl.org/a/samsung-comply-russian-law-local-apps-phones-pcs/30442915.html 2021 – Lee Jae Young sent back to Jail over new bribery and corruption charges from 2016 https://apnews.com/article/seoul-south-korea-park-geun-hye-lee-jae-yong-asia-pacific-30b0d59a2215ecfc89f06b608bd31cb2 2021 – Lee Jae Young released early from prison https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-58196575#:~:text=Samsung%20heir%20Lee%20Jae-yong%20has%20been%20released%20from,is%20also%20in%20jail%20for%20bribery%20and%20corruption. 2021 – Samsung cheating on SSD Benchmarks https://www.extremetech.com/computing/326377-samsung-is-the-latest-ssd-manufacturer-cheating-its-customers 2021 – Samsung Fined $47Million Price Fixing in Netherlands https://www.reuters.com/business/samsung-fined-47-mln-price-fixing-netherlands-2021-09-29/ 2021 – 61 models of Samsung phones banned from Russia over IP theft https://www.reuters.com/technology/russian-court-bars-sale-samsung-phones-over-lawsuit-report-2021-10-21/ 2022 – Samsung Cheating on Benchmarks with GOS https://www.androidauthority.com/samsung-gos-throttling-apps-3125885/?utm_source=feedly&utm_medium=webfeeds 2022 – Samsung De-listed from GeekBench https://beebom.com/samsung-phones-delisted-geekbench-app-throttling-issue/ 2022 – Samsung Cheating on TV Panel Performance Tests https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rhto9MmiExE 2022 – Galaxy Phone Battery Swelling https://www.theverge.com/2022/10/12/23393174/samsung-phone-lithium-ion-batteries-swelling-expanding-mrwhosetheboss-ifixit 2022 – Samsung collecting too much PII before data breach class action https://www.theregister.com/2022/09/27/samsung_data_theft_lawsuit/ 2022 – Samsung not paying for their share of arbitration over breach class action https://topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/privacy/samsung-push-for-arbitration-over-alleged-unlawful-collection-of-biometric-data/ 2023 – Samsung sued over storage calculations https://topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/lawsuit-news/samsung-class-action-lawsuit-and-settlement-news/samsung-class-action-alleges-company-falsely-advertises-galaxy-s21-storage-capacity/ 2023 – Samsung Astro Turfing Reddit https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55Tr-AjTVbg 2023 – Samsung Dismantling Right to Repair through IP law https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGD9PHjoH8A 2023 – MOOOON ZOOOOM FAAAAKE https://www.reddit.com/r/Android/comments/11nzrb0/samsung_space_zoom_moon_shots_are_fake_and_here/ 2023 – Samsung investing 230 billion in SK for chip fab https://www.reuters.com/technology/samsung-electronics-invest-230-bln-through-2042-south-korea-chipmaking-base-2023-03-15/ Support SomeGadgetGuy! 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People around the world are used to expecting a certain level of corruption from their leaders. Greed and self-interest are a part of the universal human experience. What most people aren't used to, however, is the idea that the leader of their country may be subservient to a shadowy religious figure that has been manipulating their life for over three decades. Join us for this episode of "No One is Competent" as we go over the Park Geun-hye scandal, one of the most intriguing and bizarre events in South Korean politics.
Park had previously received a 22-year-old prison term for her role in a vast corruption scandal.
Last updated : 2021.12.24 The latest news from home and abroad, with a close eye on Northeast Asia and the Korean Peninsula in particular
Last updated : 2021.12.24 Du lundi au samedi, rendez-vous avec l'actualité de la Corée sous tous ses angles.
Hàn Quốc được biết đến là đất nước thực thi luật bắt buộc thực hiện nghĩa vụ quân sự. Cuộc sống ở quân ngũ đã trở thành nỗi ác mộng cho nam giới nước này do nạn bắt nạt, bạo lực và quấy rối trong một môi trường hoàn toàn tách biệt với thế giới bên ngoài. Sự thật về quân đội Hàn Quốc đã được khắc họa chân thật trong bộ phim truyền hình trên Netflix có tên gọi là D.P với sự tham gia diễn xuất của diễn viên chính Jung Hae-in và Koo Kyo-hwan. Cốt truyện của bộ phim đã thu hút người xem và làm dấy lên các cuộc thảo luận về những gì đang diễn ra trong quân đội Hàn Quốc. Hàn Quốc áp dụng thực hiện nghĩa vụ quân sự bắt buộc Sự chia cắt giữa hai miền Triều Tiên và Hiệp định đình chiến ngày 27/07/1953 đã khiến Hàn Quốc trở thành một trong số ít quốc gia trên thế giới vẫn nằm trong tình trạng “chiến tranh lạnh” căng thẳng. Để đảm bảo khả năng phản ứng nhanh và gửi tiếp viện sớm nhất trong trường hợp nguy cấp, Hàn Quốc duy trì quân đội thường trực 550.000 người và 2,7 triệu quân dự bị. Hầu như tất cả nam giới Hàn Quốc phải thực hiện nghĩa vụ quân sự 21 tháng. Đi nghĩa vụ tuy gian khổ, nhưng là để bảo vệ quốc gia và là môi trường để nam giới Hàn Quốc rèn luyện thể chất, hình thành nếp sống ngăn nắp, có tổ chức và kỷ luật. Đầu tiên, các tân binh phải trải qua 5 tuần huấn luyện gian khổ. Họ làm quen lối sống kỷ luật từ những điều nhỏ nhất, như hô đúng khẩu hiệu, ăn ngủ đúng giờ, gấp chăn phải vuông thành sắc cạnh. Hàng ngày, họ phải rèn thể lực như đang thực chiến, tập hít khí độc, hành quân từ giữa đêm đến rạng sáng. Bạo lực, bắt nạt và tự sát Tuy nhiên, đi nghĩa vụ quân sự đã trở thành một áp lực lớn cho nam giới Hàn Quốc vì họ phải phải đối mặt với nhiều vấn đề trong môi trường sống khép kín. Trước tiên, để bảo đảm việc tuân lệnh trên chiến trường, quân đội Hàn Quốc coi kỷ luật gắt gao từ cấp trên là một hành động đương nhiên để dạy các tân binh. Ngoài ra, do ảnh hưởng lâu đời của Nho Giáo, xã hội Hàn Quốc luôn đặc biệt coi trọng tư tưởng về thứ bậc, từ trường học đến nơi làm việc. Việc phân cấp bậc này còn được thể hiện rõ hơn nhiều trong quân đội. Những con số điều tra trong quân ngũ đã nói lên tất cả. Dữ liệu từ năm 2006 đến tháng 06/2011 cho thấy có tổng cộng 552 quân nhân tử vong, trong đó 63% là do tự sát. Trong số các trường hợp tự sát này, 89 trường hợp do không thích nghi với cuộc sống công vụ (25,6%), 61 do môi trường gia đình (17,5%), 58 vì khối lượng công việc (16,7%), 55 vì mệt mỏi và bi quan (15,8%) và 34 do bị quấy rối và lạm dụng tình dục (9,8%). Năm 2020, trong số 55 binh sĩ hy sinh trong quân đội Hàn Quốc, có tới 44 trường hợp là tự sát. Dù con số này đã giảm nhưng không thể chắc chắn rằng hệ thống quân đội đã thay đổi. Hơn nữa, khi một người chết trong quân đội không phải vì chiến tranh, mà vì tự sát, thì nên đổ lỗi cho ai? Nhiều vấn đề tương tự vẫn tồn tại và đều xuất phát từ những nguyên nhân như: đánh đập, lăng mạ, bạo lực tình dục, bắt nạt và văn hóa “bịt miệng” nạn nhân. Những câu chuyện đau lòng Cả nước Hàn Quốc có lẽ vẫn còn nhớ ngày 07/04/2014, nhiều phương tiện truyền thông đưa tin một vụ bắt nạt tập thể trong một đơn vị y tế của Lữ đoàn Pháo binh 977 thuộc Sư đoàn Bộ binh 28 và dẫn đến cái chết của Yoon Seung-ju, một binh nhất 20 tuổi. Anh Yoon đã bị bốn quân nhân cấp trên đánh vào đầu và ngực. Mặc dù anh bất tỉnh nhưng những kẻ tấn công không thương tiếc và tiếp tục đánh. Cuối cùng, binh nhất Yoon Seung-ju bị chết não và qua đời vào sáng hôm sau, sau khi được đưa đến bệnh viện. Trước khi chết, Yoon đã phải chịu những hình thức đối xử tàn nhẫn khác như bị cấm ăn và ngủ. Một câu chuyện khác, về “sự cố trung sĩ Lim”, cũng khiến cả nước Hàn Quốc bàng hoàng. Vào cuối năm 2014, trung sĩ Lim, thuộc sư đoàn bộ binh 22 ở Goseong-gun, tỉnh Gangwon, đã tấn công đồng đội bằng súng và lựu đạn, khiến 5 người thiệt mạng và 7 người khác bị thương nặng. Lim đã trốn khỏi doanh trại, đem theo vũ khí, sau khi giết đồng đội. Sau đó, Lim viết thư tuyệt mệnh, rồi tự bắn vào ngực, nhưng đã được đưa đến bệnh viện và được cứu sống. Trong bức thư tuyệt mệnh do quân đội công bố, Lim đã đề cập đến sự cô lập và nạn bắt nạt trong quân ngũ. Đây có thể là nguyên nhân chính gây ra sự cố này. Hai câu chuyện này đã tạo nên một câu nói nổi tiếng về quân đội Hàn Quốc : “Nếu bạn chịu đựng, bạn sẽ là binh nhì Yoon. Nếu bạn không thể chịu đựng, bạn sẽ trở thành trung sĩ Lim”. Vào tháng 03/2021, người chuyển giới đầu tiên nhập ngũ ở Hàn Quốc đã bị ép xuất ngũ sau khi bị phát hiện là đã phẫu thuật chuyển giới. Sau đó, người ta phát hiện xác của người này. Cũng trong năm 2021, đã có hai nữ quân nhân tự tử sau khi bị quấy rối tình dục. Quân đội Hàn Quốc có thể thay đổi? Trong những năm gần đây, bộ Quốc Phòng đã đẩy mạnh các biện pháp nâng cao và cải cách văn hóa quân đội. Đầu tiên là để những “lính mới” và “lính cũ” sử dụng chung không gian trong lúc nghỉ giải lao để giảm xung đột thứ bậc. Trước đây, quân nhân chỉ được phép nghỉ một vài ngày lễ chính nhưng giờ họ được phép đi chơi ngoài giờ vào các ngày trong tuần. Một sự thay đổi lớn nữa, đó là quân nhân được sử dụng điện thoại di động sau giờ làm việc, cho phép họ liên lạc với người thân, bạn bè. Và nếu có bất kỳ vấn đề gì, họ có thể phơi bày mọi bất công trong doanh trại quân đội với thế giới bên ngoài. Sau cái chết của binh nhì Yoon do nhiều lần bị bắt nạt và hành hung vào năm 2014, bộ Quốc Phòng cũng đã cho phép gia đình đến thăm nhiều hơn. Tuy nhiên, những thay đổi này vẫn không giảm hẳn các trường hợp tấn công tình dục, bắt nạt và tự sát trong quân đội. Kết quả là, đã có nhiều người đứng lên kêu gọi những cải cách triệt để hơn. Cho Kyu-suk, điều phối viên tại Trung tâm Nhân quyền Quân đội, một nhóm công dân ủng hộ quyền của binh sĩ cho biết : “Quân đội không thể trốn tránh trách nhiệm sau cái vỏ bọc bảo vệ an ninh quốc gia được nữa. Quân đội cần phải được cải thiện ở rất nhiều khía cạnh khác”. D.P : Những thước phim đau lòng D.P là tên bộ phim được chiếu trên Netflix, nói về thực trạng trong quân đội. Bộ phim được chuyển thể từ bộ truyện tranh cùng tên của tác giả Kim Bo-tong, dựa trên câu chuyện thật của Kim Bo-tong với tư cách là một cựu quân nhân D.P. D.P, viết tắt của 2 từ “deserter pursuit” (truy bắt lính đào ngũ), là một đội có nhiệm vụ truy tìm và bắt giữ những kẻ đào ngũ trong quân đội. Mở đầu phim, đạo diễn lồng một đoạn phát biểu năm 2014 của tổng thống Park Geun Hye khi đó : “Kỷ luật quân sự thực sự bắt đầu từ việc xây dựng một doanh trại tôn trọng nhân cách của đồng đội và đảm bảo quyền con người”. Tuy nhiên, khi xem phim, khán giả sẽ nhận ra quân đội chính là mô hình thu nhỏ của xã hội và tồn tại nhiều mâu thuẫn đầy nhức nhối. Không phải ngẫu nhiên mà bộ phim lấy bối cảnh năm 2014. Vào thời điểm đó, một số trường hợp lạm dụng quân đội cấp cao đã gây chấn động cả nước và làm dấy lên làn sóng phản đối kịch liệt của công chúng. Câu chuyện về binh nhì Yoon và trung sĩ Lim được đạo diễn lồng ghép khéo léo vào tình tiết của bộ phim, giúp khán giả có thể thấu hiểu nỗi đau và đồng cảm với nạn nhân về những gì đã diễn ra. Trả lời phỏng vấn báo RFI Tiếng Việt, anh Gyudong, nghiên cứu sinh tại trường đại học KyungPook, cho biết: "D.P mô tả chính xác những gì tôi đã thấy ở trong Quân đội, vì vậy tôi có thể đồng cảm với nội dung bộ phim. Trung đội của tôi không quá khắt khe và hà khắc, nhưng có quá nhiều điều tôi không thể hiểu được. Theo như tôi biết, những điều đó đã được sửa chữa rất nhiều kể từ sau hai thảm kịch bùng nổ của binh nhì Yoon và trung sĩ Lim. Trong thời gian phục vụ trong quân đội, tôi có thể biết được rằng có những điều vô lý đang xảy ra trong xã hội Hàn Quốc. Những người thiếu tinh thần dẻo dai chắc khó vượt qua được điều này". Trả lời phỏng vấn báo BBC Hàn Quốc, nam diễn viên kiêm người mẫu Kang Un, người từng phục vụ trong quân đội từ năm 2012 đến 2014, phải nói : “Khi tôi chứng kiến kẻ thủ ác đấm vào cổ người lính, tôi đã phải tạm dừng xem phim, vì đó chính xác là những gì tôi đã trải qua. Tôi cũng đã bị các tiền bối của mình đánh rất nhiều. Khi ai đó đánh vào cổ bạn 20 lần như vậy, nước mắt bạn sẽ rơi”. Còn đạo diễn của bộ phim D.P, ông Han Jun-hee, khi trả lời phỏng vấn truyền thông, nhận xét: “Tôi biết là đã có một số cải tiến trong quân đội, nhưng tôi nghĩ loạt phim này sẽ đóng một vai trò trong việc giữ cho chúng ta cảnh giác, không lơ là trước bạo lực trong quân đội”.
Bienvenue sur Radio Tangun, une émission présentée par Bryan et Manon qui questionne, pense, débat et décrypte les trois Corées.Les années 1990 en Corée du Sud sont marquées par l'arrivée au pouvoir du premier président civil depuis 1961, Kim Young Sam. Le chemin vers la démocratie en Corée du Sud n'a pas été de tout repos et s'est parfois fait au prix des droits humains.Des mandats de Kim Dae Jung et de Noh Moo Hyun marqués par la politique du rayon de soleil, en passant par le retour des conservateurs au pouvoir et la débâcle politique de Park Geun Hye, Bryan et Manon continuent de retracer les faits marquants de l'histoire contemporaine sud-coréenne dans ce nouveau podcast qui fait suite à l'épisode 7. ------------------------------------------ Pour suivre nos différentes activités, n'hésitez pas à nous suivre sur nos différents réseaux sociaux : • Site de la Revue Tangun : www.revuetangun.com • Site de Voyages Tangun : www.voyagestangun.com • Twitter : @RevueTangun - https://twitter.com/revuetangun • Instagram : @revue.tangun - https://www.instagram.com/revue.tangun/ • Facebook : Revue Tangun - https://www.facebook.com/revuetangun • Adresse e-mail : revuetangunpro@gmail.com ------------------------------------------ MUSIQUE : • Ehrling - Chasing Palm Trees - https://soundcloud.com/ehrling/chasing-palm-trees-ehrling ------------------------------------------ MONTAGE AUDIO : Julien Saint-Sevin ------------------------------------------ VISUELS : Julien Saint-Sevin © Revue Tangun
Bienvenue sur Radio Tangun, une émission présentée par Bryan et Manon qui questionne, pense, débat et décrypte les trois Corées.Les années 1990 en Corée du Sud sont marquées par l'arrivée au pouvoir du premier président civil depuis 1961, Kim Young Sam. Le chemin vers la démocratie en Corée du Sud n'a pas été de tout repos et s'est parfois fait au prix des droits humains.Des mandats de Kim Dae Jung et de Noh Moo Hyun marqués par la politique du rayon de soleil, en passant par le retour des conservateurs au pouvoir et la débâcle politique de Park Geun Hye, Bryan et Manon continuent de retracer les faits marquants de l'histoire contemporaine sud-coréenne dans ce nouveau podcast qui fait suite à l'épisode 7. ------------------------------------------ Pour suivre nos différentes activités, n’hésitez pas à nous suivre sur nos différents réseaux sociaux : • Site de la Revue Tangun : www.revuetangun.com • Site de Voyages Tangun : www.voyagestangun.com • Twitter : @RevueTangun - https://twitter.com/revuetangun • Instagram : @revue.tangun - https://www.instagram.com/revue.tangun/ • Facebook : Revue Tangun - https://www.facebook.com/revuetangun • Adresse e-mail : revuetangunpro@gmail.com ------------------------------------------ MUSIQUE : • Ehrling - Chasing Palm Trees - https://soundcloud.com/ehrling/chasing-palm-trees-ehrling ------------------------------------------ MONTAGE AUDIO : Julien Saint-Sevin ------------------------------------------ VISUELS : Julien Saint-Sevin © Revue Tangun
durée : 00:57:55 - Cultures Monde - par : Florian Delorme, Mélanie Chalandon, Antoine Dhulster - Lundi 15 février, l’ancien président d’Afrique du Sud ne s’est pas présenté devant les juges pour s'expliquer sur de nombreuses affaires de corruption. L'exaspération est grande au sein de la population. L'heure de la justice a-t-elle enfin sonné pour Jacob Zuma ? - réalisation : Vincent Abouchar, Benjamin Hû
Last updated : 2021.02.04 The latest news from home and abroad, with a close eye on Northeast Asia and the Korean Peninsula in particular
Langsam gesprochene Nachrichten | Deutsch lernen | Deutsche Welle
Trainiere dein Hörverstehen mit den Nachrichten der Deutschen Welle von Montag – als Text und als verständlich gesprochene Audio-Datei.Kreml-Kritiker Nawalny bei Rückkehr nach Russland festgenommen Der russische Oppositionspolitiker Alexej Nawalny ist bei seiner Rückkehr nach Moskau kurz nach der Landung festgenommen worden. Der Kreml-Kritiker hatte vor fünf Monaten einen Giftanschlag in Sibirien knapp überlebt und war danach in Berlin behandelt worden. Die russische Strafvollzugsbehörde FSIN wirft Nawalny vor, wiederholt gegen die Auflagen einer fünfjährigen Bewährungsstrafe verstoßen zu haben. Weiter Kritik an Verhaftung Nawalnys Bundesaußenminister Heiko Maas hat die sofortige Freilassung des am Sonntag in Moskau festgenommenen Kremlkritikers Alexej Nawalny gefordert. Russland sei durch seine Verfassung und durch internationale Verpflichtungen an das Prinzip der Rechtsstaatlichkeit und den Schutz der Bürgerrechte gebunden, sagte Maas in Berlin. Diese Prinzipien müssten auch gegenüber Nawalny gelten. Auch EU-Ratschef Charles Michel und der Außenbeauftragte Josep Borrell verlangten die Freilassung des 44 Jahre alten russischen Oppositionspolitikers. Ähnlich äußerten sich die Regierungen Frankreichs und der USA. Zweieinhalb Jahre Haft für Samsung-Erbe wegen Korruption In Südkorea ist der Erbe des Elektronikkonzerns Samsung, Lee Jae-yong, wegen Bestechung und Veruntreuung zu zweieinhalb Jahren Gefängnis verurteilt worden. Lee sei sofort verhaftet worden, berichtete die Nachrichtenagentur Yonhap. Grund ist eine Korruptionsaffäre um die frühere südkoreanische Präsidentin Park Geun Hye. Samsung soll hohe Summen an Unternehmen einer Park-Freundin gezahlt und im Gegenzug unter anderem politische Vergünstigungen erhalten haben. Lee ist Vize-Chef von Samsung, gilt aber als oberster Entscheidungsträger des führenden Herstellers von Smartphones und Speicherchips. Trump unternimmt noch einmal Schritte gegen China Der scheidende US-Präsident Donald Trump verschärft Insidern zufolge kurz vor seiner Ablösung noch einmal seinen Kurs gegen China. Ins Visier genommen wurde nach einem Bericht der Nachrichtenagentur Reuters erneut der weltgrößte Hersteller von Telekommunikationsausrüstung, Huawei Technologies. Demnach hat die Trump-Regierung amerikanische Huawei-Geschäftspartner wie den Chiphersteller Intel benachrichtigt, dass sie bestimmte Exportlizenzen widerruft. Zugleich sollen Dutzende neuer Anträge zur Belieferung des chinesischen Technologiekonzerns abgelehnt werden. Brasilien beginnt mit Impfungen gegen Corona Brasilien hat mit dem Impfen gegen das Coronavirus begonnen. Als erste Bürgerin erhielt eine Krankenschwester in São Paulo eine Impfdosis. Die Arzneimittelagentur Anvisa hatte zuvor die Impfstoffe von AstraZeneca und der Universität Oxford und von Coronavac des chinesischen Herstellers Sinovac zugelassen. Dem Start war ein Streit zwischen Präsident Jair Bolsonaro und den Gouverneuren der Bundesstaaten vorausgegangen. Bolsonaro betonte immer wieder, dass keine Eile zum Impfen bestehe. Vor allem der Gouverneur des Staates São Paulo, João Doria, kritisierte den Staatschef wegen dessen Verharmlosung der Pandemie. Erneut Tote in sudanesischer Region Darfur In der sudanesischen Unruheregion Darfur sind bei gewaltsamen Zusammenstößen zwischen Angehörigen verschiedener Volksgruppen mehr als 80 Menschen getötet worden. Es gebe außerdem 160 Verletzte, teilte das sudanesische Ärztekomitee mit. Die Kämpfe in El Geneina, der Hauptstadt des Bundesstaats West-Darfur, waren durch Auseinandersetzungen zwischen dem Stamm der Massalit und arabischen Nomaden ausgelöst worden.
Last updated : 2021.01.18 The latest news from home and abroad, with a close eye on Northeast Asia and the Korean Peninsula in particular
News Briefing -Former President Park Geun-hye's 20 year jail sentence -Prospects for an extended ban on gatherings of more than 5 people after the 17th -Public opinion on COVID-19 vaccination -Ahn Cheol-soo's refusal to join main opposition People Power Party -박근혜 전 대통령 국정농단 20년 징역 판결 -17일 이후 5인 이상 사적 모임 금지 연장 전망 -코로나19 백신 접종에 대한 국민 여론 -국민의 힘 입당 거부한 안철수 Guest: Choi Mira, Reporter
Last updated : 2021.01.14 The latest news from home and abroad, with a close eye on Northeast Asia and the Korean Peninsula in particular
Featured Interview: Park Geun Hye Administration's handling of Sewol Disaster -박근혜 정부의 세월호 참사 대응 Guest: Hwang Pil Gyu, Lawyer, GongGam Human Rights Law Foundation
With a tall glass of cold barley tea in hand, tune in for a conversation about Han Kang's Human Acts as I explore the events of the 1980 Gwangju Uprising. Han's 2014 novel examines humanity's ability for cruelty and kindness, as she attempts to reconcile this paradox. Han Kang's interview with the White Review can be found here. Deborah Smith's essay for Asymptote can be found here. More details on the Gwangju Uprising, Park Chun Hee, Chun Doo Hwan and Park Geun Hye can be found in their respective links. Music: In Conversation, by Tiffany Fong Cover: redbeanporridge Special thanks to Isabella Davey for listening to the draft and providing valuable feedback for this episode.
Emerging markets have had their own impeachment episodes in the likes of South Korea, South Africa and Brazil. Amid mounting talk of the potential impeachment of U.S. President Donald Trump, one analyst said investors may want to look abroad to gain insight into the market implications of presidential impeachments. Craig Botham, senior emerging markets economist at U.K. asset manager Schroders, said one problem with studying how markets responded to a presidential impeachment was the lack of data, as the U.S. having seen only one successful impeachment out of four attempts. Wall Street could therefore supplement their research with case studies from emerging markets such as South Korea and Brazil, whose heads of state have been ousted in the past decade. Investors are in a tizzy over what impeachments have historically spelled for Wall Street, after House Democrats opened up an impeachment inquiry against U.S. President Donald Trump. A whistleblower complaint accused Trump of withholding military aid to the Ukraine to pressure it into investigating former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden’s dealings with Ukraine. Yet even a larger data set that encompassed examples in emerging markets did not yield any easy conclusions, said Botham, citing a paper he wrote on the topic in 2017. “In general, there is no direction basically. A priori you cannot say impeachment is going to be good or bad for markets,” said Botham. But he added impeachment could set off prolonged periods of heightened market volatility. In the table below, he shows that major stock-market benchmarks tended to show outsized moves during impeachment proceedings. During the impeachment investigations into Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton, annualized volatility for the S&P 500 (SPX) with historical levels. Botham cautioned, however, that even if impeachment sagas do “make markets more skittish, but it can be hard to disentangle with the events of the day.” For example, impeachment proceedings against Bill Clinton coincided with a surge in volatility in stock and bond markets, overlapping with the Russian debt crisis and the collapse of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management. It was therefore unclear if the market jitters were sparked by political uncertainty or heightened global economic growth concerns. Another lesson that could be gleaned from previous impeachment proceedings was that the market impact was often tied to expectations of policy change. If a new head of state didn’t break away from past policies, speculation of a looming impeachment was unlikely to spur turbulent trading in markets. “The first question you ask is how likely is impeachment anyway? The second question is what does it change relative to market expectations compared with policy,” said Botham. In Brazil’s case, President Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment was eagerly awaited by investors as her successor, Michel Temer, was considered a more business-friendly candidate who would reform a sclerotic public pension system, and shift the country away from left-wing populist policies that had been blamed for bringing Brazil’s public finances to its knees. Yet in South Korea, market volatility was suppressed during Park Geun Hye’s impeachment in part because there was “less anticipation of a big change in economic policy,” said Botham. As for the U.S., investors may not react much to Trump’s impeachment inquiry as both Republican and Democrats have a mutual desire for a more confrontational approach with China’s trade practices. In the outside chance there was a change of Presidency, Botham said Trump’s successor may pursue a more conciliatory approach to the U.S’s major trading partners, who may share similar grievances against Beijing and may be willing to form a united front against China. “If markets do move on the impeachment talk, people might start to price in a better trade-related outcome for the EU and NAFTA countries,” said Botham.
Emerging markets have had their own impeachment episodes in the likes of South Korea, South Africa and Brazil. Amid mounting talk of the potential impeachment of U.S. President Donald Trump, one analyst said investors may want to look abroad to gain insight into the market implications of presidential impeachments. Craig Botham, senior emerging markets economist at U.K. asset manager Schroders, said one problem with studying how markets responded to a presidential impeachment was the lack of data, as the U.S. having seen only one successful impeachment out of four attempts. Wall Street could therefore supplement their research with case studies from emerging markets such as South Korea and Brazil, whose heads of state have been ousted in the past decade. Investors are in a tizzy over what impeachments have historically spelled for Wall Street, after House Democrats opened up an impeachment inquiry against U.S. President Donald Trump. A whistleblower complaint accused Trump of withholding military aid to the Ukraine to pressure it into investigating former Vice President Joe Biden and his son Hunter Biden’s dealings with Ukraine. Yet even a larger data set that encompassed examples in emerging markets did not yield any easy conclusions, said Botham, citing a paper he wrote on the topic in 2017. “In general, there is no direction basically. A priori you cannot say impeachment is going to be good or bad for markets,” said Botham. But he added impeachment could set off prolonged periods of heightened market volatility. In the table below, he shows that major stock-market benchmarks tended to show outsized moves during impeachment proceedings. During the impeachment investigations into Richard Nixon and Bill Clinton, annualized volatility for the S&P 500 (SPX) with historical levels. Botham cautioned, however, that even if impeachment sagas do “make markets more skittish, but it can be hard to disentangle with the events of the day.” For example, impeachment proceedings against Bill Clinton coincided with a surge in volatility in stock and bond markets, overlapping with the Russian debt crisis and the collapse of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management. It was therefore unclear if the market jitters were sparked by political uncertainty or heightened global economic growth concerns. Another lesson that could be gleaned from previous impeachment proceedings was that the market impact was often tied to expectations of policy change. If a new head of state didn’t break away from past policies, speculation of a looming impeachment was unlikely to spur turbulent trading in markets. “The first question you ask is how likely is impeachment anyway? The second question is what does it change relative to market expectations compared with policy,” said Botham. In Brazil’s case, President Dilma Rousseff’s impeachment was eagerly awaited by investors as her successor, Michel Temer, was considered a more business-friendly candidate who would reform a sclerotic public pension system, and shift the country away from left-wing populist policies that had been blamed for bringing Brazil’s public finances to its knees. Yet in South Korea, market volatility was suppressed during Park Geun Hye’s impeachment in part because there was “less anticipation of a big change in economic policy,” said Botham. As for the U.S., investors may not react much to Trump’s impeachment inquiry as both Republican and Democrats have a mutual desire for a more confrontational approach with China’s trade practices. In the outside chance there was a change of Presidency, Botham said Trump’s successor may pursue a more conciliatory approach to the U.S’s major trading partners, who may share similar grievances against Beijing and may be willing to form a united front against China. “If markets do move on the impeachment talk, people might start to price in a better trade-related outcome for the EU and NAFTA countries,” said Botham.
In Episode 14 of the CounterVortex podcast, Bill Weinberg notes the national protest wave that brought down president Park Geun-Hye in South Korea last December, and asks why Americans can't similarly rise to the occasion and launch a mass militant movement to remove Donald Trump. Given this extreme emergency—the detention gulag now coming into place, with undocumented migrants the "test population" for domestic fascism—we should be mobilizing in our millions. Apart from the broad masses being simply too distracted by gizmos and consumerism to see the walls closing in (a problem to be discussed elsewhere), Weinberg identifies two significant obstacles to unity: 1. The fundamental split in the left over the whole question of Russia and its electoral meddling; and 2. The phenomenon of party parasitism, with both the Democrats and sectarian-left factions seeking to exploit popular movements to advance their own power. He concludes by asking whether social media, which is partially responsible for getting us into this mess through its totalizing propaganda environment, can help get us out—whether it can empower us to sidestep the Dems and the alphabet-soup factions alike and work rapidly and efficiently to build a leaderless, broad-based, intransigent movement around the aim of removing Trump. Listen on SoundCloud, and support our podcast via Patreon. The text of this rant is also on Bill Weinberg's Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/notes/bill-weinberg/what-will-it-take-to-stop-trump/1839750179401741/ Music: "General Strike" by D.O.A. http://www.suddendeath.com/bands/d-o-a Production by Chris Rywalt We are asking listeners to donate just $1 per episode via Patreon. A total of $30 per episode would cover our costs for engineering and producing. We are currently up to $15. New episodes will be produced every two weeks. We need your support.
On today's episode of Loud & Clear, Brian Becker and John Kiriakou are joined by Ted Rall, an award-winning editorial cartoonist and columnist, and Mark Sleboda, an international affairs and security analyst.Once again, chaos is engulfing Washington over a series of u-turns made by the Trump administration in the wake of the Trump-Putin Helsinki summit. Meanwhile, developments in the Mueller probe are making it clearer than ever that the investigation is deeply connected to the big picture of U.S.-Russia relations. On today’s regular Friday segment covering the upcoming midterm elections, the hosts talk about Ocasio-Cortez, DeLeon over Feinstein, and the House Democrats’ ridiculous new slogan. Jacqueline Luqman, the co-editor-in-chief of Luqman Nation, and the co-host of the Facebook livestream “Coffee, Current Events & Politics” Thursdays at 9 p.m., joins the show. Israeli occupation authorities are facing more protests today in Gaza as at least two Palestinians were killed and three were injured in an Israeli air raid and at the Gaza border during protests. Israel has pledged an even tougher response to Palestinian sending flammable kites and balloons carrying firebombs across the border. Richard Becker, an anti-war organizer and author of the book “Palestine, Israel and the U.S. Empire,” joins the show.A secret letter was just revealed yesterday from Former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak to then-CIA Director Gina Haspel, asking for support in a competitive election last May. He painted current Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad as a threat to US interests. Najib has since been indicted on several corruption charges, including abuse of power. Brian and John speak with Nile Bowie, a writer and journalist with the Asia Times, covering Singapore and Malaysia. A South Korean court today sentenced former president Park Geun Hye to an additional eight years in prison for abusing state funds and violating election laws. Park is already serving 24 years in prison for a massive corruption scandal. Simone Chun, a fellow at the Korea Policy Institute and a member of the Korean Peace Network, joins Brian and John. Kathy Kraninger, President Trump’s nominee to lead the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, went in front of the Senate Banking Committee yesterday, where she fully dodged many senators’ questions of her. What we did find out is that she has almost no financial experience, having worked most of her career in the Department of Homeland Security. So why is she the nominee for the CFPB? Jim Kavanagh, the editor of thepolemicist.net, whose most recent piece is “Fighting Fake Stories: The New Yorker, Israel and Obama,” joins the show.The hosts continue the regular segment of the worst and most misleading headlines. Walter and John speak with Steve Patt, an independent journalist whose critiques of the mainstream media have been a feature of his blog Left I on the News, where you can find more ridiculous headlines from the week, and Loud & Clear producer Nicole Roussell.
Ousted South Korean President Park Geun-Hye is handed down with a 24-year sentence for corruption and influence peddling, and the Boozers discuss what it means. Was it too harsh? Is she just paying for the sins of her father? Or is she the victim of the popularism of time? Also, what does this mean for where South Korea is heading? That and more on this week’s Boozing.
Spotlight on Asia, focuses on the jailing of South Korea's former president 66 year-old Park Geun Hye. Produced and presented by RFi's Rosslyn Hyams with guests John Nilsson-Wright and Noh Jung-sun. South Korea's first woman president Park Geun-hye, was found guilty of 16 counts of corruption and abuse of power, and fined her close to 100 million euros. The people of South Korea, more than 50 per cent of who in February 2013 elected the daughter of former late South Korean dictator Park Chung-hee, are divided over the unprecedented sentence, and noisy supporters protested outside the court after her sentence on 6 April 2018. John Nilsson-Wright, a senior lecturer at Cambridge University in the UK and Senior Research Fellow for Northeast Asia at the Asia Programme at Chatham House, notes that "there's certainly a will and a desire on the part of the current government of president Moon Jae-in, to change the political and economic culture of South Korea. He was a beneficiary of the candle-lit protests against President Park that led to her impeachment." While acknowledging that some analysts see corruption and influence peddling as an issue which runs through the various strata of South Korean society, and noting that questions could be asked about the fairness of Park's heavy sentence, he considers "it will send a very powerful signal to other politicians and to corporate Korea." Click the start arrow to hear more from John Nilsson-Wright and from Korean academic Noh Jung-sun on this issue. Park's former culture minister, Cho Yoon-sun was jailed for two years in January for her role in drawing up a blacklist of between 9,000 and 10,000 artists seen as critical of Park's government, by criticising her or her late father, or who had voiced support for opposition parties. The list, included artists in film, theatre, dance, music, fine arts and literature, and included world-renowned personalities including novelist Han Kang, winner of the 2016 Man Booker International Prize for The Vegetarian, and 2018 contender, and film director Park Chan-wook, whose Oldboy took the Grand Prix at the Cannes Film Festival in 2004, and the Jury Prize in 2009 for Thirst. Former President Park had denied she was involved in the blacklist, along with other corruption charges that led to her stiff sentence.
We're behind in the editing, but better late than never. This episode is about Korea's suicide crisis, so it is a little heavy. Special Guest: Shaun Webb of Shaun on SiteNews of the Weird-Korean scientists try to engineer the smell out of Kimchi-People named Park Geun Hye changing name at accelerated rates-Male cop dresses as woman to lure and catch criminals-Commentary from Korea Times suggests that a wave of anti-Koreanism in the US will begin soonOn the Pulse: Korea has a suicide problem, and we've invited Shaun Webb on the podcast to discuss his own attempted suicide and to discuss the very serious situation in Korea.
We're behind in the editing, but better late than never. This episode is about Korea's suicide crisis, so it is a little heavy. Special Guest: Shaun Webb of Shaun on SiteNews of the Weird-Korean scientists try to engineer the smell out of Kimchi-People named Park Geun Hye changing name at accelerated rates-Male cop dresses as woman to lure and catch criminals-Commentary from Korea Times suggests that a wave of anti-Koreanism in the US will begin soonOn the Pulse: Korea has a suicide problem, and we've invited Shaun Webb on the podcast to discuss his own attempted suicide and to discuss the very serious situation in Korea.
Down to Business English: Business News to Improve your Business English
Dez Morgan gives Skip Montreux the inside information on what brought down South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye. Free audio script available at downtobusinessenglish.com Visit iTunes to subscribe to Down to Business English, rate the show, and leave a comment. Visit our website or Facebook page to ask a question, post a comment, and sign up for the Down to Business English Newsletter. Contact Skip, Dez, and Samantha at downtobusinessenglish@gmail.com Follow Skip & Dez Skip Montreux on Twitter Skip Montreux on Instagram Skip Montreux on Facebook Dez Morgan on Twitter RSS Feed
Tensions on the Korean Peninsula are rising with the arrival of a US aircraft carrier, overseas voting is up, ex-president Park Geun-hye could soon be indicted, & coffee is king. All that & more on the latest Korean News Update podcast episode from Korea FM.Stream the episode online at http://www.spreaker.com/user/seoulitup/tensions-rising-on-korean-peninsula-overDownload the full episode at http://api.spreaker.com/download/episode/11603711/2017_04_11.mp3Rate & Review this podcast at http://bit.ly/KFMReviewThis episode is brought to you by Podcast Assist & its $30 per hour flat rate podcasting voice overs, editing, mastering, transcriptions & even hosting (select a topic, they'll create & host the podcast). Visit Facebook.com/PodcastAssist for more information. Subscribe to this & other Korea FM original content via:iTunes - http://apple.co/1O91B39Overcast - http://bit.ly/KFMovercastRSS - http://bit.ly/KFMfeedStitcher - http://bit.ly/KFMstitcherPlayer FM - http://bit.ly/KFMplayerfmTunein - http://bit.ly/KFMtuneinAcast - http://bit.ly/KFMacast
Tensions on the Korean Peninsula are rising with the arrival of a US aircraft carrier, overseas voting is up, ex-president Park Geun-hye could soon be indicted, & coffee is king. All that & more on the latest Korean News Update podcast episode from Korea FM.Stream the episode online at http://www.spreaker.com/user/seoulitup/tensions-rising-on-korean-peninsula-overDownload the full episode at http://api.spreaker.com/download/episode/11603711/2017_04_11.mp3Rate & Review this podcast at http://bit.ly/KFMReviewThis episode is brought to you by Podcast Assist & its $30 per hour flat rate podcasting voice overs, editing, mastering, transcriptions & even hosting (select a topic, they'll create & host the podcast). Visit Facebook.com/PodcastAssist for more information. Subscribe to this & other Korea FM original content via:iTunes - http://apple.co/1O91B39Overcast - http://bit.ly/KFMovercastRSS - http://bit.ly/KFMfeedStitcher - http://bit.ly/KFMstitcherPlayer FM - http://bit.ly/KFMplayerfmTunein - http://bit.ly/KFMtuneinAcast - http://bit.ly/KFMacast
How effective is political polling today? With social trends pointing to a continuing decrease in the rate of democratic participation, in South Korea and elsewhere around the world, how can polls remain representative? In our conversation prior to his recent lecture at the University of Michigan, UC Berkley Professor Taeku Lee discusses how the political science of public polling, until recently a primarily American area of study, has gained academic traction in South Korea over the last decade. This episode was produced in collaboration with the Nam Center for Korean Studies. Subscribe to the Nam Center's Youtube channel at umichncks. Music on this episode is 7080 star ??? with ???.
Former South Korean President Park Geun-hye has been arrested, the salvaged Sewol ferry has arrived at port, Seoul’s air quality is the worst ever recorded, & the monthly pay gap between Korean workers has reached an all time high. All that & more on the latest Korean News Update podcast episode from Korea FM. ASIAN POP RADIO LINKS: Download our free APP here: goo.gl/nRFtjy Listen via asianpopradio.com Our Twitter: twitter.com/asianpopradio Our Youtube: youtube.com/asianpopradio KOREAFM LINKS: Subscribe to this & other Korea FM original content via: iTunes - http://apple.co/1O91B39 Overcast - http://bit.ly/KFMovercast RSS - http://bit.ly/KFMfeed Stitcher - http://bit.ly/KFMstitcher audioBoom - http://bit.ly/KFMaudioBoom Player FM - http://bit.ly/KFMplayerfm Tunein - http://bit.ly/KFMtunein Acast - http://bit.ly/KFMacast Photo: The Star: https://goo.gl/PlatcB
What role did public polling play in the spectacular political collapse of President Park Geun-hye? How effective is political polling today? And with social trends pointing to a continuing decrease in the rate of democratic participation, how can polls remain representative?In our conversation prior to his recent lecture at the University of Michigan, UC Berkley Professor Taeku Lee discusses how the political science of public polling, until recently a primarily American area of study, has gained academic traction in South Korea over the last decade. This episode was produced in collaboration with the Nam Center for Korean Studies. Subscribe to the Nam Center's Youtube channel at umichncks.Music on this episode is 7080 star 김연자 with 봄비가.
Jesse and Brittany discuss grown men who do not eat vegetables (with a minor sidetrack on same-siding), listener voicemails, Donald Trump's awkward visit with Angela Merkel and dismissive attitude toward shaking her hand, South Korea's impeachment of President Park Geun-hye, Gallup's latest on Donald Trump's approval rating, GCHQ controversy and Donald Trump's continued lies to... The post #286 – “No Veggies, Awkward Merkel Visit, Impeachment of President Park Geun-hye, Trump Approval Rating Hits New Low, GCHQ Controversy, and Obamacare vs. TRUMPcare.” appeared first on I Doubt It Podcast.
Just as Theresa May prepares to pull the trigger on Article 50 and start Britain's departure from the EU, Scotland's first minister has thrown a spanner in the works with plans for a second referendum on Scottish independence. Denis Staunton reports from London, where the Brexit stakes have been raised by Nicola Sturgeon who will next week ask the Scottish parliament to get behind #IndyRef2. Also on this week's podcast, our Berlin correspondent Derek Scally has the latest on the growing row over the Turkish government's attempts to hold rallies in European countries. And, Asia correspondent Clifford Coonan reports on the strange details of the impeachment of South Korea's disgraced ex-president Park Geun-Hye.
NEWS DIGEST Pt.1 Topic: South Korea Removes President Park Geun-hye Guest: 1) Dr. 김지윤 (Research Fellow/ Asan Institute for Policy Studies) 2) Professor 황정욱 (Law/ Hankuk University of Foreign Studies)
NEWS DIGEST Pt.2 Topic: South Korea Removes President Park Geun-hye Guests: 1) Dr. 김지윤 (Research Fellow/ Asan Institute for Policy Studies) 2) Professor 황정욱 (Law/ Hankuk University of Foreign Studies)
PRIME PANEL Topic: Park Geun-Hye Scandal Widens Ideological Gap Guests: Koo Se-Woong (Managing Editor/ Korea Expose)
PRIME PANEL Topic: Park Geun-Hye's Impeachment Trial Guests: Koo Se-Woong (Managing Editor/ Korea Expose)
PRIME PANEL Topic: Ruling Party Splits over the Park Geun-Hye Scandal Guests: Professor Hwang Joung-Wook (Law/ HUFS)
NEWS DIGEST Topic: President Park Geun-Hye Impeached Guests: Koo Se-Woong (Managing Editor/ Korea Expose)
PRIME PANEL Topic: Prosecutors to Question President Park Geun-Hye Guests: Professor Hwang Joung-Wook (Law/ HUFS)
Hey folks! It’s finally November and we talked about Park Geun Hye & Choi Soon Sil! Why You Gotta Be Anonymous? (We answered your listener letters) Get us @ jinjjacha.com Contact us: jinjjacha@gmail.com Find April @pinkfashioninja Find Girl Davis @G_Davis86 On twitter: @jinjjacha On instagram: Jinjjachapodcast Syndrome Store: https://syndromestore.com/?rfsn=365170.96f6de Pinkyparadise.com code: jinjjacha
Niet alleen in de VS lekken er vertrouwelijke documenten, maar ook in Zuid-Korea. President Park Geun-Hye ligt onder vuur. Nieuwssite JBTC kwam in het bezit van een harde schijf waarop zich informatie bevindt die duidt op ongeoorloofde invloed en corruptie, gepleegd door haar beste vriendin. Deze informatie had wettelijk niet eens bij de vriendin van de president terecht mogen komen. Betekent de woede onder de bevolking hierover het einde van president Park? Daarover Koreaspecialist Remco Breuker.
The Sunshine Policy – the idea that South Korea should approach North Korea through dialogue, cooperation and reconciliation – has been highly contentious ever since its inception in the late 1990s. Its initiator, former President Kim Dae Jung, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for reaching out to Pyongyang; at the same time, however, critics have branded the Sunshine Policy as [a naive attempt to appease a dangerous dictatorship] naive appeasement with a dangerous dictatorship. Even today the dispute about the right foreign policy approach towards North Korea splits the South Korean political discourse. One of the leading experts on the Sunshine Policy is Chung-In Moon. For this episode we spoke to him about the history of this policy, whether or not it failed, the philosophical underpinnings of the Sunshine Policy’s supporters and opponents, and his opinions about how South Korea and the international community should approach North Korea. Chung-In Moon is Professor of Political Science at Yonsei University and Editor-in-Chief of Global Asia. He is also Executive Director of the Kim Dae-jung Presidential Library and Museum, and previously served as Dean of Yonsei’s Graduate School of International Studies. Professor Moon is currently a member of the Presidential Committee on Unification Preparation of the Park Geun-Hye administration. Previously, under former President Roh Moo-hyun, Professor Moon also served as Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Northeast Asian Cooperation Initiative and was Ambassador for International Security Affairs on behalf of the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.
Fördjupningsreportage. Båda hennes föräldrar blev mördade – och nu pressas hon av Nordkorea. Park Geun-Hye är Sydkoreas första kvinnliga president och har haft jobbet i två månader. Och hittills har hon klarat utmaningarna från Nordkoreas Kim Jong-Un. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy