모바일 오유 바로가기
http://m.todayhumor.co.kr
분류 게시판
베스트
  • 베스트오브베스트
  • 베스트
  • 오늘의베스트
  • 유머
  • 유머자료
  • 유머글
  • 이야기
  • 자유
  • 고민
  • 연애
  • 결혼생활
  • 좋은글
  • 자랑
  • 공포
  • 멘붕
  • 사이다
  • 군대
  • 밀리터리
  • 미스터리
  • 술한잔
  • 오늘있잖아요
  • 투표인증
  • 새해
  • 이슈
  • 시사
  • 시사아카이브
  • 사회면
  • 사건사고
  • 생활
  • 패션
  • 패션착샷
  • 아동패션착샷
  • 뷰티
  • 인테리어
  • DIY
  • 요리
  • 커피&차
  • 육아
  • 법률
  • 동물
  • 지식
  • 취업정보
  • 식물
  • 다이어트
  • 의료
  • 영어
  • 맛집
  • 추천사이트
  • 해외직구
  • 취미
  • 사진
  • 사진강좌
  • 카메라
  • 만화
  • 애니메이션
  • 포니
  • 자전거
  • 자동차
  • 여행
  • 바이크
  • 민물낚시
  • 바다낚시
  • 장난감
  • 그림판
  • 학술
  • 경제
  • 역사
  • 예술
  • 과학
  • 철학
  • 심리학
  • 방송연예
  • 연예
  • 음악
  • 음악찾기
  • 악기
  • 음향기기
  • 영화
  • 다큐멘터리
  • 국내드라마
  • 해외드라마
  • 예능
  • 팟케스트
  • 방송프로그램
  • 무한도전
  • 더지니어스
  • 개그콘서트
  • 런닝맨
  • 나가수
  • 디지털
  • 컴퓨터
  • 프로그래머
  • IT
  • 안티바이러스
  • 애플
  • 안드로이드
  • 스마트폰
  • 윈도우폰
  • 심비안
  • 스포츠
  • 스포츠
  • 축구
  • 야구
  • 농구
  • 바둑
  • 야구팀
  • 삼성
  • 두산
  • NC
  • 넥센
  • 한화
  • SK
  • 기아
  • 롯데
  • LG
  • KT
  • 메이저리그
  • 일본프로야구리그
  • 게임1
  • 플래시게임
  • 게임토론방
  • 엑스박스
  • 플레이스테이션
  • 닌텐도
  • 모바일게임
  • 게임2
  • 던전앤파이터
  • 마비노기
  • 마비노기영웅전
  • 하스스톤
  • 히어로즈오브더스톰
  • gta5
  • 디아블로
  • 디아블로2
  • 피파온라인2
  • 피파온라인3
  • 워크래프트
  • 월드오브워크래프트
  • 밀리언아서
  • 월드오브탱크
  • 블레이드앤소울
  • 검은사막
  • 스타크래프트
  • 스타크래프트2
  • 베틀필드3
  • 마인크래프트
  • 데이즈
  • 문명
  • 서든어택
  • 테라
  • 아이온
  • 심시티5
  • 프리스타일풋볼
  • 스페셜포스
  • 사이퍼즈
  • 도타2
  • 메이플스토리1
  • 메이플스토리2
  • 오버워치
  • 오버워치그룹모집
  • 포켓몬고
  • 파이널판타지14
  • 배틀그라운드
  • 기타
  • 종교
  • 단어장
  • 자료창고
  • 운영
  • 공지사항
  • 오유운영
  • 게시판신청
  • 보류
  • 임시게시판
  • 메르스
  • 세월호
  • 원전사고
  • 2016리오올림픽
  • 2018평창올림픽
  • 코로나19
  • 2020도쿄올림픽
  • 게시판찾기
  • 게시물ID : sisa_664628
    작성자 : 앨머줌월트1
    추천 : 0
    조회수 : 470
    IP : 112.164.***.230
    댓글 : 4개
    등록시간 : 2016/02/20 14:40:02
    http://todayhumor.com/?sisa_664628 모바일
    유라시아에 다가오는 혼란.
    Eurasia's Coming Anarchy
    The Risks of Chinese and Russian Weakness

    China asserts itself in its nearby seas and Russia wages war in Syria and Ukraine, it is easy to assume that Eurasia’s two great land powers are showing signs of newfound strength. But the opposite is true: increasingly, China and Russia flex their muscles not because they are powerful but because they are weak. Unlike Nazi Germany, whose power at home in the 1930s fueled its military aggression abroad, today’s revisionist powers are experiencing the reverse phenomenon. In China and Russia, it is domestic insecurity that is breeding belligerence. This marks a historical turning point: for the first time since the Berlin Wall fell, the United States finds itself in a competition among great powers.

    Economic conditions in both China and Russia are steadily worsening. Ever since energy prices collapsed in 2014, Russia has been caught in a serious recession. China, meanwhile, has entered the early stages of what promises to be a tumultuous transition away from double-digit annual GDP growth; the stock market crashes it experienced in the summer of 2015 and January 2016 will likely prove a mere foretaste of the financial disruptions to come.

    Given the likelihood of increasing economic turmoil in both countries, their internal political stability can no longer be taken for granted. In the age of social media and incessant polling, even autocrats such as Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin feel the need for public approval. Already, these leaders no doubt suffer from a profound sense of insecurity, as their homelands have long been virtually surrounded by enemies, with flatlands open to invaders. And already, they are finding it harder to exert control over their countries’ immense territories, with potential rebellions brewing in their far-flung regions.

    The world has seen the kind of anarchy that ethnic, political, and sectarian conflict can cause in small and medium-size states. But the prospect of quasi anarchy in two economically struggling giants is far more worrisome. As conditions worsen at home, China and Russia are likely to increasingly export their troubles in the hope that nationalism will distract their disgruntled citizens and mobilize their populations. This type of belligerence presents an especially difficult problem for Western countries. Whereas aggression driven by domestic strength often follows a methodical, well-developed strategy—one that can be interpreted by other states, which can then react appropriately—that fueled by domestic crisis can result in daring, reactive, and impulsive behavior, which is much harder to forecast and counter.

    As U.S. policymakers contemplate their response to the growing hostility of Beijing and Moscow, their first task should be to avoid needlessly provoking these extremely sensitive and domestically declining powers. That said, they cannot afford to stand idly by as China and Russia redraw international borders and maritime boundaries. The answer? Washington needs to set clear redlines, quietly communicated—and be ready to back them up with military power if necessary

    DANGER IN MOSCOW

    Partly because Russia’s economic problems are far more severe than China’s, Moscow’s aggression has been more naked. After President Boris Yeltsin’s chaotic rule came to an end in 1999, Putin consolidated central authority. As energy prices soared, he harnessed Russia’s hydrocarbon-rich economy to create a sphere of influence in the countries of the former Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact. His goal was clear: to restore the old empire.

    But since direct rule through communist parties had proved too costly, Putin preferred an oblique form of imperialism. In lieu of sending troops into the old domains, he built a Pharaonic network of energy pipelines, helped politicians in neighboring countries in various ways, ran intelligence operations, and used third parties to buy control of local media. Only recently has Putin acted more overtly on a number of fronts, encouraged no doubt by the lack of a Western response to his 2008 military campaign in Georgia. In early 2014, Russian forces seized Crimea and Russian proxy militias initiated a war in eastern Ukraine. And in late 2015, Putin inserted the Russian military into the Syrian civil war, specifically to save the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad but also, more broadly, to restore Moscow’s position in the Levant—and to buy leverage with the EU by influencing the flow of refugees to Europe.

    Not coincidentally, these military adventures have accompanied the sharp reversal of Russian economic power. In 2014, the price of oil collapsed, the countries of central and eastern Europe continued to wean themselves off Russian gas, slow global growth further reduced the appetite for Russian hydrocarbons and other natural resources, and the West levied damaging sanctions on Moscow. The result has been a full-blown economic crisis, with the ruble losing roughly half of its value against the U.S. dollar since 2014. That year, Russian GDP growth fell to nearly zero, and by the third quarter of 2015, the economy was shrinking by more than four percent. In the first eight months of 2015, capital investment declined by six percent and the volume of construction fell by eight percent.

    Russia’s economic problems run deep, leaving its leaders with few easy options for fixing them. For decades, Russia has relied on natural resource production and a manufacturing sector that makes consumer goods for the domestic market (since few foreigners want to buy Russia’s nonmilitary products). Despite some pockets of ostentatious wealth, the service sector has remained underdeveloped. Because Putin and his camarilla never built civil institutions or a truly free market, the corrupt, gangster-led economy of Russia today exhibits eerie similarities to the old Soviet one.

    Back in the 1980s, when that economy was hit by a crisis, Mikhail Gorbachev responded by opening up the political system—only to be rewarded with anarchy and the collapse of Russia’s empire. Putin learned this lesson well and is determined to do the opposite: keep the political system closed while distracting the masses with displays of Russian power in the near abroad. Putin is a former intelligence agent, not a former apparatchik. Thus, although he nurses historical grudges concerning Russia’s place in the world, he is not deceiving himself about Russia’s internal problems. As the Russian economy decays further, Putin surely knows that for the sake of domestic approval, his foreign policy must become more creative and calculating, even deceptively conciliatory at moments. Over time, expect him to find new ways to undermine NATO and the EU, even as he claims to be helping the West fight the Islamic State, or ISIS. For the more chaos he can generate abroad, the more valuable the autocratic stability he provides at home will appear. Russians may know in the abstract that a freer society is preferable, but they fear the risks of such a transition.

    Try as he might, however, Putin will not be able to shelter his regime from the fallout of economic collapse. Desperation will spawn infighting among a ruling elite that has grown used to sharing generous spoils. Given the absence of strong institutions, as well as the brittle and highly centralized nature of the regime, a coup like the one that toppled Nikita Khrushchev in 1964 cannot be ruled out; Russia remains Soviet in its style of governance. The country has experienced the crumbling of autocracy followed by chaos before (as during and after the 1917 revolutions), and it’s possible that enough turmoil could cause Russia to fragment yet again. The heavily Muslim North Caucasus, along with areas of Russia’s Siberian and Far Eastern districts, distant from the center and burdened by bloody politics, may begin loosening their ties to Moscow in the event of instability inside the Kremlin itself. The result could be Yugoslavia lite: violence and separatism that begin in one place and spread elsewhere. As Moscow loses control, the global jihadist movement could take advantage of the vacuum and come to Russia’s outlying regions and to Central Asia.

    Bad as this sounds, things could still get worse. Back in 1991, the Polish intellectual Adam Michnik predicted that future leaders in Russia and eastern Europe would fill the gap left by the collapse of communism with “a coarse and primitive nationalism.” Putin has adopted just such a nationalism in recent years. He has slyly backed separatist movements in Abkhazia, the Donbas, Nagorno-Karabakh, South Ossetia, and Transnistria, creating deniable conflicts that result in warlord-run statelets. In the years ahead, he may well choose to provoke more of these so-called frozen conflicts, but this time in NATO Baltic member states (which have sizable Russian populations and which Moscow still considers lost provinces). Meanwhile, Putin will try to play on Europe’s need for Russian support in Syria to force Europe to acknowledge his annexation of Crimea and his de facto rule over eastern Ukraine.

    But just when a firm response is most needed, Europe is looking less and less likely to be able to provide one. In some ways, Russia’s current crisis parallels that of Europe, which is also dividing into core and peripheral areas. Despite adjustments by the European Central Bank and other measures, a time of slow global growth, coupled with Europe’s inability to make fundamental reforms, means that the European political and economic crisis 
will persist. By frightening states into resolidifying their borders, the migrant and terrorism crises will also exacerbate the EU’s divisions—and, inevitably, NATO’s as well.

    Such disunity will make Europe’s attempts to confront Russia even more hesitant and disorganized than they are today. As NATO weakens, the former Warsaw Pact states will increasingly look to the United States for their security. They will also divide into subgroups: already, Poland, the Baltic countries, and Scandinavia are forming an alliance of sorts to withstand Russian aggression, and the Visegrad Group—which includes the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia—is becoming more concrete in terms of its political and military consultation. Further sowing division is Nord Stream 2, a proposed second pipeline through the Baltic Sea that would allow Russia to bypass central and eastern Europe when sending gas to western Europe. In all these countries, slow economic growth will intensify right-wing and left-wing nationalist movements, which prey on unmet economic expectations.

    BEIJING ON THE BRINK

    Slow growth is also leading China to externalize its internal weaknesses. Since the mid-1990s, Beijing has been building a high-tech military, featuring advanced submarines, fighter jets, ballistic missiles, and cyberwarfare units. Just as the United States worked to exclude European powers from the Caribbean Sea beginning in the nineteenth century, China is now seeking to exclude the U.S. Navy from the East China and South China Seas. Its neighbors have grown worried: Japan, which views Chinese naval expansion as an existential threat, is shedding its pacifism and upgrading its forces, and Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Vietnam have modernized their militaries, too. What were once relatively placid, U.S.-dominated waters throughout the Cold War have become rougher. A stable, unipolar naval environment has given way to a more unstable, multipolar one.

    But as with Russia, China’s aggression increasingly reflects its cresting power, as its economy slows after decades of acceleration. Annual GDP growth has dropped from the double-digit rates that prevailed for most of the first decade of this century to an official 6.9 percent in the third quarter of 2015, with the true figure no doubt lower. Bubbles in the housing and stock markets have burst, and other imbalances in China’s overleveraged economy, especially in its shadow banking sector, are legion.

    Then there are the growing ethnic tensions in this vast country. To some degree, the Han-dominated state of China is a prison of various nations, including the Mongols, the Tibetans, and the Uighurs, all of whom have in varying degrees resisted central control. Today, Uighur militants represent the most immediate separatist threat. Some have received training in Iraq and Syria, and as they link up with the global jihadist movement, the danger will grow. In recent years, there has been a dramatic upsurge of bombings linked to Uighur separatism in the region of Guangxi, a transit point on the smuggling route Uighurs take to Vietnam—proof that terrorism will not be confined to minority areas in China’s west. Beijing has tried to pacify these movements with economic development—for example, proposing the Silk Road Economic Belt in Central Asia in order to undermine Uighur nationalism there. But if such immense projects falter because of China’s own slowing economy, separatism could explode into greater violence.

    As conditions worsen at home, China and Russia are likely to increasingly export their troubles in the hope that nationalism will distract their disgruntled citizens.
    Even more so than Putin, Xi, with years of experience serving the Communist Party in interior China, must harbor few illusions about the depth of China’s economic problems. But that does not mean he knows how to fix them. Xi has responded to China’s economic disarray by embarking on an anticorruption drive, yet this campaign has primarily functioned as a great political purge, enabling him to consolidate China’s national security state around his own person. Since decisions are no longer made as collectively as before, Xi now has greater autonomy to channel domestic anxiety into foreign aggression. In the last three decades, China’s leadership was relatively predictable, risk averse, and collegial. But China’s internal political situation has become far less benign.

    China’s ambitions reach further than Russia’s, but they have generated less concern in the West because they have been more elegantly applied. Whereas Putin has sent thugs with ski masks and assault rifles into eastern Ukraine, Xi’s aggression has involved much smaller, incremental steps, making it maddeningly difficulty for the United States to respond without appearing to overreact. He has sent his coast guard and merchant ships (rather than exclusively his navy) to harass Philippine warships, dispatched an oil rig into waters claimed by both China and Vietnam (but for only a few weeks), and engaged in land-reclamation projects on contested islands and reefs (but ones that are devoid of people). And since these acts of brinkmanship have taken place at sea, they have caused no hardship for civilians and practically no military casualties.

    Other Chinese moves are less subtle. Besides expanding its maritime claims, China is building roads, railways, and pipelines deep into Central Asia and is promising to invest tens of billions of dollars in a transportation corridor that will stretch from western China across Pakistan to the Indian Ocean, where China has been involved in port projects from Tanzania to Myanmar (also called Burma). As China’s economic troubles worsen, the elegance of its aggression may wear off and be replaced by cruder, more impulsive actions. Xi will find it harder to resist the urge to use Asian maritime disputes to stoke nationalism, a force that brings a measure of cohesion to societies threatening to fragment.
    Potentially adding to the danger are looming crises in the countries of Central Asia: Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. The continued stability of these authoritarian countries has made it easier for China to control its own Central Asian minorities, but time may be running out. Some of these regimes are still led by the same Brezhnev-era Central Committee types who have ruled since the end of the Cold War. These leaders are now aging, their regimes enjoy questionable legitimacy, their economies remain tied to China’s and Russia’s own slowing engines, and their populations are growing more Islamic. Central Asia, in other words, may be ripe for an Arab Spring–like eruption.

    Facing parallel economic slowdowns and geopolitical threats, China and Russia may forge a tactical alliance based on their compatible authoritarian systems and aimed at managing their frontier areas and standing up to the West. To this end, the two of them finally resolved a long-running border dispute last November, with Russia giving up a small tract of land in its Far East claimed by China. But the handover caused popular protests in both countries: ordinary Russians opposed the Kremlin’s acquiescence, and many Chinese complained that they got too little. Here again, public opinion can constrain dictatorships, 
in this case inhibiting their ability to forge useful alliances.

    THE COMING CHAOS

    Central control—who has it, who doesn’t—is the geopolitical issue of our time. Centralized authoritarian rule over large areas is inherently problematic, and all the more so in an era of intensified ethnic, religious, and individual consciousness, when electronic communications can incite identity-based grievances. No wonder the map of Eurasia is about to become more complex.

    Policymakers in Washington had better start planning now for the potential chaos to come: a Kremlin coup, a partial breakup of Russia, an Islamic terrorist campaign in western China, factional fighting in Beijing, and political turbulence in Central Asia, although not probable, are all increasingly possible. Whatever form the coming turbulence takes, it seems certain the United States will be forced to grapple with new questions of one sort or another. Who will control Russia’s nuclear arsenal if the country’s leadership splinters? How can the United States stand up for human rights inside China while standing by as the regime puts down an internal rebellion?

    Planning for such contingencies does not mean planning a war of liberation, à la Iraq. (If China and Russia are ever to develop more liberal governments, their people will have to bring about change themselves.) But it does mean minimizing the possibility of disorder. To avoid the nightmarish security crises that could result, Washington will need to issue clear redlines. Whenever possible, however, it should communicate these redlines privately, without grandstanding. Although congressional firebrands seem not to realize it, the United States gains nothing from baiting nervous regimes worried about losing face at home.

    In the case of Russia, the United States should demand that it stop initiating frozen conflicts. As Putin attempts to distract Russians from economic hardship, he will find it more tempting to stir up trouble in his neighborhood. Lithuania and Moldova probably top his list of potential targets, given their corrupt and easily undermined democratic governments. (Moldova is already nearing the point of political anarchy.) Both countries are also strategically valuable: Moldova could provide Russia with the beginning of a gateway to the Balkans, and Lithuania offers a partial land bridge to the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad. For Putin, frozen conflicts carry the advantage of being undeclared, reducing the odds of a meaningful Western response. That’s why the response must be in kind: if Putin makes behind-the-scenes moves in Lithuania or Moldova, the West should intensify sanctions against Russia and increase the tempo of military exercises in central and eastern Europe.

    At the very least, NATO must dramatically ramp up intelligence sharing among eastern European countries and be ready to quickly deploy more aircraft, ground forces, and special operations forces to the region. The hundreds of U.S. soldiers, marines, and sailors stationed on a rotating basis in frontline NATO states of the former Warsaw Pact constitute such a small presence that they are unlikely to deter Russian aggression; several battalions or even a brigade is needed. More broadly, the United States will need to create a military tripwire—one that deters Russia from launching a limited strike across its borders but does so without provoking a crisis. Thus, the U.S. counter to Russia’s growing “anti-access/area-denial” capabilities in the highly populated Baltic region will have to be more fine-tuned than its response to China’s in the emptier South China Sea.

    Washington also needs to set clear redlines with China. In the South China Sea, it cannot allow the country’s land-reclamation projects to graduate to the establishment of a so-called air defense identification zone—airspace where China reserves the right to exclude foreign aircraft—as the regime declared in the East China Sea in 2013. Such moves form part of a strategy of deliberate ambiguity: the more unclear and complex a military standoff becomes, the more threatened the United States’ maritime dominance will be. If China does announce such a zone in the South China Sea, Washington must respond by increasing U.S. naval activity in the vicinity and expanding military aid to regional allies. Already, the U.S. Navy has begun freedom-of-navigation operations, however halfhearted, within the 12-nautical-mile boundary of sovereign authority that China has claimed around its man-made islands. If these operations do not become regular and more explicit, China will not feel deterred.

    A TIME FOR STRENGTH

    Never before has U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt’s adage, now a cliché, “Speak softly and carry a big stick” been more applicable. A big stick can deter aggression, whether it originates from strength or from weakness. But speaking softly is particularly germane when aggression arises out of weakness, since harsh rhetoric can needlessly provoke leaders who already have their backs against the wall. Indeed, it is more important for the United States to increase its own military presence in the Baltic states and the South China Sea than it is to publicly condemn Moscow and Beijing for their actions in those areas.

    A big stick means quickly restoring the U.S. defense budget after the devastation of sequestration. The U.S. Army counted nearly 570,000 soldiers in 2010 and is set to shrink to 450,000 in 2017. The United States now stations 33,000 land forces in Europe, down from 200,000 during the Cold War. Compared with ships and planes, ground troops constitute a more credible demonstration of U.S. power, because they advertise the country’s willingness to shed blood to honor its commitments. Since war has become increasingly unconventional, the United States no longer needs to station as many ground forces in Europe as it did during the Cold War, but a larger deployment is still called for. As for naval assets, the Baltic Sea is too small for the optimal use of an aircraft carrier strike group, so the United States should send more submarines to the region.


    You have read 1 of 1 of your free articles this month
    Subscribe now and save 55%!


    SUBSCRIBE NOW
    Related Tweets


    Washington should also reassure its allies by limiting its rhetoric about transnational issues such as climate change to settings where it is strictly appropriate. The president should never expect Israelis, Poles, and Taiwanese, for example, to trust him because he is leading on climate change (as he has intimated they should); they want him to highlight their own geopolitical dilemmas. Although pandemics, rising sea levels, and other global challenges are real, the United States can afford the luxury of focusing on them thanks largely to its own protected geography. Many U.S. allies, by comparison, live dangerously close to China and Russia and must contend with narrower, more traditional threats. Given their own tragic geography, Asian nations want to see more American warships in their waters. As for central and eastern Europeans, they want a muscular and unambiguous commitment to their defense. Now more than ever, because of the way globalization and the communications revolution have made geography more interconnected, an American president risks losing his reputation for power in one theater if he fails to respond adequately to aggression in another.

    In 1959, the political scientist Robert Strausz-Hupé defined “protracted conflict” as a state of sustained rivalry that favors the side that is both patient and able to “thrive upon conflict as the normal condition of the twentieth century.” Whereas the Western mindset “sees only the tools of peace,” he wrote, the side with the advantage “turns plowshares into swords.” Strausz-Hupé had the Chinese and Soviet Communists in mind when he wrote those words. Yet the United States ultimately managed to fend off those adversaries through the policy of containment, which was protracted conflict in its own right.

    Containment wasn’t only about restraint, as many now like to believe; it was also about engaging in calculated aggression and consistently reassuring allies. Throughout the Cold War, U.S. presidents prevailed while avoiding nuclear war by understanding that rivalry and conflict, rather than peace, are normal. Today, as China and Russia accelerate down the path of protracted conflict, future U.S. presidents must acknowledge that same truth. And they, too, must apply the right mix of strength and caution as they leave behind the comparatively calm decades of the Cold War and post–Cold War eras and prepare to navigate the anarchy of an unraveling Eurasia
    출처 https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/china/2016-02-15/eurasias-coming-anarchy?cid=nlc-fatoday-20160219&sp_mid=50738255&sp_rid=ZWxsYmJhbmdAbmF2ZXIuY29tS0&spMailingID=50738255&spUserID=OTkzNjEwNTg1MzAS1&spJobID=862423710&spReportId=ODYyNDIzNzEwS0
    앨머줌월트1의 꼬릿말입니다
    전쟁은 이미 시작되었고...한국이 현명한 판단을 하길 바랄뿐. 왔다리 갔다리 차선변경의 댓가는 양쪽으로부터 두들겨맞기.

    더불어민주당이 집권하고싶다고? 무조건 미국을 잡아. 

    이 게시물을 추천한 분들의 목록입니다.
    푸르딩딩:추천수 3이상 댓글은 배경색이 바뀝니다.
    (단,비공감수가 추천수의 1/3 초과시 해당없음)

    죄송합니다. 댓글 작성은 회원만 가능합니다.

    번호 제 목 이름 날짜 조회 추천
    1243250
    대화와 용서의 전제 조건 포크숟가락 24/11/18 04:01 18 0
    1243249
    서울시 마을버스 외국인 기사 추진 갓라이크 24/11/18 01:31 213 1
    1243248
    성남시에 공문 보낸 정승희 국토부 국장의 헛소리 들어보자 [3] Thelonious 24/11/18 00:02 253 1
    1243247
    [단독] 돈 건넨 후보들, 윤두창과 명함 교환 [4] Link. 24/11/17 20:24 499 16
    1243246
    제가 볼 땐 국짐에 정치적으로 안좋은 판결이예요. 헉냠쩝꿀 24/11/17 19:52 580 4
    1243244
    절망의 끝에서 되돌아보면 [3] 뻐럭꾸의대가 24/11/17 18:29 450 15
    1243243
    "'尹 골프 보도' 기자 수사" "폭군..기막혀" CBS '발칵' [10] 옆집미남 24/11/17 18:27 570 17
    1243242
    강규태 판사가 사퇴한 자리에 한성진이 들어갈 수 있었던 이유에 대해 [2] Thelonious 24/11/17 17:44 506 15
    1243241
    참 이해가 안되는 오른쪽당 [3] OMG! 24/11/17 17:38 420 7
    1243240
    왠만하면 집회에 나가고 싶지 않았다 [6] 구찌입니다 24/11/17 17:35 487 17
    1243239
    한성진 판사의 이재명 유죄 판결엔 명백한 논리적 오류가 있습니다 [3] 창작글 자유와고독 24/11/17 15:19 636 9
    1243238
    국짐이 이때다 싶어 자꾸 사법부를 부정하냐고 하는데 [5] v오징어의유머v 24/11/17 15:14 585 18
    1243237
    완결) 왜 이재명은 이리도 가혹한 공격을 받는가 (펌글) [11] 펌글 무지개너머 24/11/17 13:55 687 14
    1243236
    30년 판사 생활하고 최근 퇴임한 변호사의 한성진 평가 [2] Thelonious 24/11/17 12:12 773 5
    1243235
    공권력을 공정히 쓰라고 줬는데 사권력으로 이용하는 것들 [5] 창작글펌글 愛Loveyou 24/11/17 12:09 446 11
    1243234
    명태균이 대선 경선에서 여론조사 조작으로 섞열이 부정 당선시킨 오호유우 24/11/17 12:06 446 8
    1243233
    고교 무상교육 예산 99% 삭감한 이유 - 이주호 교육부장관 [3] 쌍파리 24/11/17 11:21 842 11
    1243232
    대한민국의 푸틴과 라스푸틴 [1] Aㅏ저씨 24/11/17 06:32 741 6
    1243231
    판사도 고소할수 있나요? [11] 알트코인 24/11/17 04:38 833 13
    1243230
    영끌족들 지옥 시작 [9] 갓라이크 24/11/17 01:25 1257 11
    1243227
    [4K] 이재명 대표 연설 현장 (3차 집회) [2] Link. 24/11/16 22:18 506 14
    1243226
    판사 ㅅㄲ 하나가 [7] 창작글 봄빛33 24/11/16 21:40 1205 14
    1243225
    [단독] 윤두창 공천 개입 10분 간격으로 착착 [5] Link. 24/11/16 20:51 823 14
    1243224
    "골프 치고 사기 치는 尹"…서울서 또 윤석열 퇴진 집회 [2] 펌글 hsc9911 24/11/16 20:06 715 8
    1243223
    [오늘자] 연합뉴스 레전드 사진 [10] Link. 24/11/16 18:28 1295 26
    1243222
    7시쯤엔 다 해산들하시고 안계실까요? [5] 아놀 24/11/16 18:26 736 11
    1243221
    지금 광화문입니다 [10] universea 24/11/16 17:03 918 22
    1243220
    광화문 상황 매우 안좋습니다 [35] 싼타스틱4 24/11/16 16:00 1953 19
    1243219
    광화문입니다. 비가 오는지 보겠어. [13] 싼타스틱4 24/11/16 13:30 942 16
    1243218
    길로틴이 필요합니다 [2] 재기재기 24/11/16 13:10 604 5
    [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [다음10개▶]
    단축키 운영진에게 바란다(삭제요청/제안) 운영게 게시판신청 자료창고 보류 개인정보취급방침 청소년보호정책 모바일홈