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Search Result for “Japan”

Showing 1 - 7 of 7

OPINION

The unbearable bleakness of government TV news

Oped, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 17/10/2020

» The outpouring of popular dissent on Wednesday proved to be a flash in the pan; by dawn the next morning, the sit-in at Government House had been disbanded, rank and file protesters were sent packing and the protest leaders were put under arrest.

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OPINION

Time running out on Tokyo Olympics

News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 19/02/2020

» Japan needs to rethink the Olympics. The most pressing reason to postpone or cancel the 2020 Tokyo summer games, which are due to start in late July, is a raging public health crisis of unknown dimensions.

OPINION

US hubris has real-world consequences

News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 23/12/2014

» The Interview is based on a deeply-flawed conceit rooted in American exceptionalism: that a film about the killing a leader for the fun of it is funny as long as the target is unpopular and foreign.

OPINION

Might and right: The power of one man

News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 17/02/2014

» Chess maestro Garry Kasparov has made a small but meaningful contribution to free speech in journalistic circles by challenging the widely-held taboo about invoking Hitler's name as a cautionary warning.

OPINION

Miyazaki and Aso battle for Japan's hearts and minds

News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 03/08/2013

» Unresolved issues of history continue to haunt and distort the present, all the more so when hidden from view. Historical controversies need a good airing from time to time, not so much to salvage the past as to save the future from repetition of past mistakes.

OPINION

All crackdowns are not equal

News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 27/02/2013

» When politicians stake out the high moral ground and announce a crackdown, it can be a smokescreen for business as usual, or it can mean they really mean business.

OPINION

Thailand slips back into a divisive war with itself

News, Philip J Cunningham, Published on 15/10/2012

» It's a brisk autumn day, all sun and no rain, in the upstate New York town of Ithaca. The leaves are turning and the hilly landscape is alive with a profusion of colour; a good day for a walk. Meandering along tree-lined streets under blue skies, I look forward to meeting a legendary scholar from Cornell's golden age of Southeast Asian studies, an historian who had left before I arrived but whose stellar reputation lingers through books, classroom discussion and reminiscences of his colleagues.