
This photo taken Aug. 11, 2023, shows a damaged road along a stream at a village in the southeastern city of Daegu following heavy rainfall caused by Typhoon Khanun the previous day. (Yonhap)

This is another example of how Koreans can rally in crisis to protect the country’s image. Can you imagine Taylor Swift or other American pop idols at the last minute coming together to do a short notice concert for Scouts in order to protect America’s image?:

About 40,000 participants of the 2023 World Scout Jamboree gathered in Seoul on Friday for a K-pop concert, wrapping up the world event plagued by a heat wave and a typhoon with a glitzy entertainment show.
The “K-pop super live” concert took place at Seoul World Cup Stadium in western Seoul following a closing ceremony to look back on highlights of their 12 turbulent days in South Korea and hand over the Scout flag to a representative from Poland, the host country for the 2027 jamboree.
Girl group NewJeans took the stage with “ETA” from its recently released album and the global hit “Hype Boy,” and 18 other K-pop artists performed at the show, including IVE, NCT Dream, ITZY, Mamamoo, The Boyz, Kang Daniel and fromis_9.
Also on the stage were Shownu X Hyungwon, Zerobaseone, Kwon Eun-bi, Jo Yuri, P1Harmony, KARD, The New Six and ATBO.
Yonhap
You can read more at the link.


Can you imagine how many US politicians would be sent to jail for defaming former Presidents if Korean defamation laws were implemented in the US?:

Deputy National Assembly Speaker Chung Jin-Suk was convicted Thursday of defaming the honor of late President Roh Moo-hyun with his derisive remarks about Roh’s tragic death.
Judge Park Byung-gon of the Seoul Central District Court sentenced the fifth-term lawmaker of the ruling People Power Party to six months in prison, a ruling heavier than the prosecution’s demand for a fine of 5 million won (US$3,793). He was not taken into custody immediately.
If the sentence is confirmed by the Supreme Court, Chung will lose his parliamentary seat.
The charges against Chung stem from a post he made on his Facebook account in September 2017, commenting on Roh’s suicide death in May 2009 amid a corruption investigation.
Chung claimed Roh’s wife, Kwon Yang-sook, and their son had received millions of dollars in bribes from a businessman close to the president.
He further claimed that following an investigation by the prosecution into the allegations, a domestic dispute ensued between the couple and she left their home. On that night, Roh, left alone, took his own life, Chung wrote.
Yonhap
You can read more at the link.
Just when you thought the Jamboree fiasco could not get any worse now Korean Scouts are claiming racism over their accommodations:

Korean Jamboree Scouts protest being treated like “asylum seekers” in own country: they were taken to church auditorium with no showers while foreign Scouts offered plush accommodations at corporate retreats with own rooms, showers and fitness center
370 of the Korean Scouts were assigned to an auditorium of a Christian church in Yongin, Geonggyi Province, for their post-Saemangeum accommodation. They are not happy with this Jimjilbang-style facility and their parents are protesting “reverse discrimination.”
Obviously, there are no beds at the auditorium so church administrators brought in mats to have them sleep en masse in one large area. The Korean Scouts charge the mats are too thin to sleep comfortably on and that there are no showers at the church. They claim to be using garden hoses attached to faucets to wash themselves.
Some told their parents that they would rather go back to Saemangeum than put up with the church-provided facility: “They told me that they are being treated like asylum-seekers in their own country. We can understand that we need to treat our foreign guests well. However, this is unacceptable.”
Donga Ilbo
You can read more at the link.
One way of looking at this is that this is one of the best aspects of Korea is how people can come together to protect the country’s image. Can you imagine what the reaction in the U.S. would be if the President asked private companies to accommodate a bunch of Scouts and provide tour programs for them because of government incompetence?:
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| GS E&C employees put up tents on a football field at the company’s training center in Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday, for Scouts from Greece, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Zambia and Botswana. Courtesy of GS E&C |
The abrupt relocation of participants of the 25th World Scout Jamboree on Tuesday from the Saemangeum campsite in North Jeolla Province to lodgings in eight other regions around the country has not only confused public servants nationwide, but also drawn complaints from employees working at privately owned companies which have been drafted to offer their facilities.
Korea Times
Amid the efforts of domestic firms to minimize damage to Korea’s reputation by offering an additional labor force, plus other basic necessities, due to the poor management of the global event, workers have been objecting to being forced to do tasks that are not relevant to their roles and responsibilities.
“We received a call from the presidential office on Monday night to prepare suitable accommodation, tourism programs and plans to transport the Scouts to the K-pop concert and the airport,” a GS E&C employee wrote on Blind, an anonymous chat forum app for verified employees. “After the abrupt request, my colleagues had to prepare tourism programs and put up tents for the Scouts.”
You can read more at the link.
