Saturday, April 19, 2008

Kwang Min Kim (With Extra Credit)

EXTRA CREDIT
BLOG

India

Recently, a baby girl was born in India with two faces. Despite the fact she was born abnormal features and had two pairs of eyes, lips and noses, the parents say she is healthy and doing well.
The baby, who is yet to be named, was born to factory worker Vinod Kumar and his wife Sushma three weeks ago in northern India and has been drawing attention of curious observers and others who consider her a deity in the deeply religious Hindu-majority country. “Since I never saw anything like this in my life, I was naturally scared at first,” her father said in an interview. The infant girl has found easy acceptance in Kumar’s large, extended family that says they have no plans to looks for treatment or any kind of corrective surgery. “Since the heads are fused,

Opinion

I think separating them is not possible. This case comes just months after Indian doctors performed a rare, marathon surgery to remove the extra limbs of a girl born with four arms and legs. What a coincident? I am sure there is something wrong in that country. India is messed up country. But I hope for the baby’s health and fortune.

Korea

As the number of multi-culture families keeps increasing in Korea, the government came up with programs to better support them. To help the multi-cultural families living here adapt to out society well, public facilities will offer support programs such as Korean language learning classes. The Ministry for Health Welfare and Family Affairs announced last week that it would choose five public educational facilities by July to provide customized services for the growing multi-cultural community.

Opinion

This is good program, which well established by a Korean government. Korean government should turn their ears to minority’s voice. I think this will show positive side view on Korea.
The foreigner in Korea should learn Korean and Korean government should give them a chance to learn Korean and its cultural aspects.

Primary

DEMS get personal as Clinton goes after the big win in Pennsylvania

In Pennsylvania, it’s not just about winning for Hillary Clinton. It’s about winning big
Clinton trails Barack Obama in delegates and is struggling to convince uncommitted superdelegates that her campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination is still alive and kicking. To that end, her campaign is looking for a commanding victory Tuesday to give her momentum going into the Indiana and North Carolina primaries two weeks later.

Opinon
I think A double digit victory in Penn would be huge. Super delegates are big issue in both of their campaigns. I think Clinton has been trying hard over the past week, in Penn, In interview and in a TV ad, to get electoral mileage out of Obama’s controversial claim to a group of California donors that small town voters “cling” to guns and religion out of bitterness over lost jobs. Good Job Hillary! Keep it up. But I really don’t care.


Primary
Clinton, Obama trade shots on health care plans

Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama is fighting over health care, revisiting one of the Democratic candidates few significant policy differences threes days ahead of the Penn primary .
Clinton’s campaign mounted a protest after Obama released a TV ad Saturday, to be shown statewide until the primary, criticizing Clinton’s health care reform proposal. Clinton’s health care plan includes a mandate to buy insurance and offers tax subsidies to help some people purchase it.

“What’s she not telling you about her health care plan?” the ad asks. “It forces everyone to buy insurance even if you can’t afford it, and you pay a penalty if you don’t.”

In accusing Clinton of wanting to penalize people who don’t buy insurance, the ad does not explain how Obama, without penalties of his own, would enforce his proposed mandate that children be covered. Obama’s health care plan would not mandate coverage for adults, though, and it would provide assistance that, he says, would make coverage affordable.

Clinton frequently criticizes Obama’s approach.

“I just heard that my opponent has put up an ad attacking my health care plan, which is kind of curious because my plan covers everybody and his leaves out 15 million people,” Clinton retorted Saturday in York, Pa. “Just leaves them out in the cold — now instead of attacking the problem, he chooses to attack my solution. I don’t think that we can just make speeches about this.”

Her comments came as the campaign released a statement calling the ad’s assertions “false and widely discredited.”

Opinion

Wow. Hillary actually has a point.

Just a kidding, No actually they are the same, as far as I can see nothing difference .

They want to spend ridiculous amount of money. That’s it.

In the end, no matter what they are

They are in the same category. This is their motto.

“Let’s Spend money”

That’s it. I see no differences.

But I give my applause to Clinton for trying

so hard to make difference between OBAMA and HER's

Universal Health Care Crap.

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