

What club is that?
What club is that?
Presidents in Korea can serve only one, five-year term, so I guess we’ll never know!
Sudden craving for a Reese’s!
Can confirm. Currently in Korea and it sure feels really Mondayee.
Dark Souls speedrunners be like
I have loads of suggestions, but my absolute favorite video game song is Drone by bignic from the Domina soundtrack. I listen to it on the subway at least once a month.
… and some Cambodian breast milk or I’m gonna shut down the studio.
Doctors wrote these articles to try to justify the strikes beyond the real reason.
What triggered the strikes were the opening of more positions in healthcare thus possibly effecting doctors’ bottom lines.
Edit: I’m also having trouble finding any sources that say “like 90%” of residents quit.
One of the plans-to increase the medical school quota across the nation by 66 percent (2,000 more medical students a year) immediately particularly drove the young physicians into hopelessness.
From the first paragraph of the article you posted.
its doctors are among the best-paid in the world, with the average salary for a specialist at a hospital commanding $200,000 a year. Critics of the strike say doctors oppose more competition.
From this Time article.
Basically, the med schools want to bring in more students which will, in turn, create more doctors. Existing doctors see this as competition and a threat to their livelihood. They are already well paid in Korea, so it’s just the doctors being greedy. What country wouldn’t want more medical professionals?
They’ve been doing this in Korea for more than a decade. It’s a bit annoying being mandated to throw your food scraps out separately, but it’s good to know the refuse is reused.
Topics too hot for the public! I reckon it’s probably more overreaction by the CCP. They are certainly a dramatic bunch.
Joey is the silliest of the silly billies.
Imagine Apple destroying your son’s hearing and your lawyer says, “Welp, $75,000 sounds like the going rate for the ability to hear normally. Let’s sue one of the biggest corporations in the world for that amount.” Then you go along with it.
Naw. They ain’t going back. There’s no program to send them back and it would be a massive security risk.
Some integrate better than others most certainly. Younger defectors might go to Korean universities. Older ones might go work in factories or wherever they’re a good fit. Some want to go back to North Korea because they can’t handle the cultural differences.
This guy is higher-profile than most, so he’s prolly gonna live pretty kushily.
Came in to say he’s using the Urkel defense.