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Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

时间:2010-12-5 17:23:32  作者:Management   来源:Opinion  查看:  评论:0
内容摘要:Despite the successful removal, the ordeal left Mr Lewis feeling at his "lowest" afterwards.

Despite the successful removal, the ordeal left Mr Lewis feeling at his "lowest" afterwards.

Another popular YouTuber is Jun Kwang-hoon, a pastor and founder of the evangelical Liberty Unification Party, who posts videos of politically loaded sermons urging his 200,000 subscribers to join pro-Yoon rallies. This is in line with the historically strong protestant support for conservatism in South Korea.Nam Hyun-joo, an employee at a theological school, told the BBC that she believed the Chinese Communist Party was "the main actor behind the election fraud". Standing alone outside the Constitutional Court in the biting January cold, she held a protest sign denouncing the judiciary.

Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

Other voices dominating the virtual realm are a snapshot of the rest of Yoon's support base: middle-aged or elderly men. One of them runs A Stroke of Genius, one of the largest pro-Yoon YouTube channels with 1.6 million subscribers. His livestreams of rallies and monologues pillorying Yoon's opponents regularly rack up tens of thousands of views, with the comments section flooded with calls to "protect President Yoon".In the tumultuous months since Yoon's martial law declaration, it appears that his party's popularity has not suffered.In fact, quite the opposite: While the PPP's approval ratings sank to 26.2% in the days after Yoon declared martial law, it rebounded to more than 40% just weeks later - much higher than before the chaos.

Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

Buoyed by the loyalty of his supporters, Yoon wrote in a letter to them in January that it was only after being impeached that he "felt like a president"."Everyone's kind of scratching their heads a bit here," Michael Breen, a Seoul-based consultant and former journalist who covered the Koreas, tells the BBC. While conservatives in South Korea have been "very divided and feeble" over the last decade, he says, Yoon is "now more popular with them than he was before he tried to introduce martial law".

Company should fix leaky pipes instead of pursuing £2.2bn Oxfordshire project, say activists

This solidarity has likely been fuelled by a shared dislike of the opposition, which has launched multiple attempts to impeach members of Yoon's cabinet, pushed criminal investigations against Yoon and his wife, and used its parliamentary majority to impeach Yoon's replacement Han Duck-soo.

"I think the opposition party's power in the assembly went to its head," says Mr Breen. "Now they've shot themselves in the foot."The supermarket did not say which stores or how many stores the new system was in.

If an item fails to scan, customers are shown a video on the self-service screen of their attempt, accompanied by a message saying: "The last item wasn't scanned properly. Remove from bagging area and try again."It follows a similar move by Sainsbury's, which has rolled out AI recognition technology at self-service checkouts at some of its stores.

"We regularly review the security measures in our stores and our decisions to implement them are based on a range of factors, including offering our customers a smooth checkout experience," said a Sainsbury's spokesperson."VAR Decision – Tuna Disallowed," joked one commenter on a

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