That isn’t an excuse to completely mismanage your nation’s land. The land without the people is still yours. This is the most insane excuse you guys keep giving.
You have forest management practices in place now. You just need to implement at scale ones that have been proven to seriously mitigate the impact of wildfires instead of exacerbate it.
I don't think it greed Mino-it's survival. The SK public would have judged, dragged and targeted him to the point of him not having a career if he would of not served in some way. Mental illness in SK the year of our lord 2026 does not take mental illness/issues seriously.
he’s getting no sympathy for trying to push through despite his mental health is so frustrating. Maybe if doctors say someone isn’t fit to serve, the COUNTRY should enforce that. As usual, this is a failure on Korea’s part but they’re trying to push the blame onto the individual.
The thing that pisses me off about all this is the giant elephant in the room with this whole situation- the climate around YG at that time. Had he not served he would have been crucified as well and we ALL know why and by who. He was in a lose-lose situation, and the fact that
are there even any mature sounding groups anymore 💔 and im not even talking about mature concepts but like groups w deeper and fuller voices like mamamoo or sistar or something.... like WOMAN
impact on the product on the ice does not deserve to be on the Cup, especially when doing so leaves off people who DID have a positive impact. How the NHL doesn’t have simple rules and processes in place to prevent this is crazy, but sadly not surprising for the NHL.
I truly am confused by the people defending Carolina’s owner. Idc if he ‘saved their franchise.’ It’s a shitty thing to do to put your KIDS names on the Cup over people who were involved with the team and/or played on the ice and helped the team along the way. Someone who has no-
T.O.P and his big fan 😭💗
Rough translation
MC: Can I ask you something? How old are you?
💗 : I'm 82 years old.
🔝 : 😮
MC: Since when have you been a fan?
💗 : A big fan since their debut.
MC: Do you have a favor to ask T.O.P
💗 : I'm already a grandma. Just being able to meet..
🔝 : *hugs*
😭😭😭😭
via choisyy XHS
T.O.P FIRST FAN MEETING
#우리의REUNION_WITHTOP
#TOPSX #T_O_P
@isagdragonrider Again, you have no idea what you are even talking about or what I’m even talking about for that matter. For someone who prides themself on logical and researched arguments you’re looking like the biggest idiot right now, and the fact that you have no idea why makes it even worse.
Just shows we are fundamentally different. The US was founded on not accepting stays quo. Thats literally why our country was created & is our DNA. The exact opposite it true of Europe. They accept “that’s how it’s always been done” even if the entire process & result is wrong.
The most interesting part of the red card saga isn't the ruling. It's how differently Americans and Europeans process the idea that they might have been wronged.
Europeans are fundamentally different from Americans in one particular way: they expect life to be aggravating and at times unfair. It's just a fact of moving through the world. I joke that in Europe, the customer is always wrong. You didn't read the fine print. The only pharmacy in town is closed every other Tuesday for three hours, and even if the times weren't posted, that's still your problem. Too bad if you want the bill, because the waiter's on his union-mandated half-hour smoke break, and you're just going to have to wait.
To quote the great Mark Knopfler: sometimes you're the windshield, sometimes you're the bug. There's something freeing in that. Things are less in your control, so there's less angst in managing your expectations.
In America, things couldn't be more different. We simply can't accept a wrong left unrighted.
The flight attendant sneezed handing you a drink on your one-hour flight? 15,000 frequent flyer miles. Didn't like your appetizer? A replacement is on the way, and the whole course comes off the bill. There's a reason our interstates are lined with trial lawyer billboards.
Europeans have turned complaining into a continental pastime with no expectation that the universe owes them a remedy for their grief. You gripe about the train being late, your friends nod solemnly and everyone goes back to their apéro. In America, we launch a full-blown investigation of the train system, sue the government (and its contractors) that allowed for the tardiness and hold a Congressional hearing on the state of national infrastructure.
So to an objective observer, the red card shouldn't have happened, and VAR was a travesty. To Americans, our star player shouldn't be unfairly banned from a match we couldn't afford to lose for a card he so obviously didn't deserve.
Who cares that FIFA used a little-used reversal to fix it. Who cares that other people are mad about it. We. Were. Wronged. It was unjust. It must be corrected. We would accept nothing less.
Europeans waxing poetic about the sanctity of the game are, of course, talking about a governing body whose last tournament host was decided via confirmed cash bribes — one that imposed dress codes on women, shrugged off widespread allegations of modern slavery and reconfigured the entire tournament calendar to suit the host country. Which is exactly the point. If you've made peace with all of that, at least enough to watch the tournament four years later, a probationary suspension isn't actually a scandal.
Maybe that's the real divide. Over millennia, Europeans have made peace with being the bug. Americans have never once considered it, and apparently, we're not about to start now.