- cross-posted to:
- politics@lemmy.world
- globalnews@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- politics@lemmy.world
- globalnews@lemmy.zip
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/48399123
At this rate Trump is going to unify Korea.
He really is the peacemaker. 🥹
He would literally spin it like that. The man can’t help but lie about everything or use it as a way to boast about himself.
If Jesus Christ himself came down, Trump would take credit for it.
I don’t know why anyone is surprised, Trump clearly expects foreign companies to invest in US operations staffed purely by white US citizens. This raid was a feature, not a bug.
Which ironically was almost what things were going to be. The Koreans that were over here were on temp visas to teach Americans how to run the plant.
Wasn’t this whole thing kicked off by a conservative tiktoker that is running for Georgia Congress? She reported seeing Mexicans, they did a raid and were surprised to find out that they were South Korean.
No idea, it doesn’t necessarily negate my point though. This wouldn’t have happened if they were white.
I like when politicians/diplomats of other countries speak very politely yet hit just as hard as whatever Trump is doing.
Good
Shame. They miss-spelled “should”.
DW changed ‘likely’ (as per Korean president Lee) to ‘Could’
There’s not a good modal verb in English to describe a likely consequence. “Will/would” are definite, ”can/could” are maybes, and “may/might” are (less likely) maybes. “Ought” and “should” signify moral(ish) perspectives and would probably be editorializing. I might use “dürfte” in German, but I’m not sure that would be right.
They probably shouldn’t have tried to rephrase it with a modal verb at all, or maybe “will likely.”
“May well” would have worked.
“May well” absolutely indicates the right level of certainty, but feels a little informal to me. I don’t know if that’s universal, but particles in English almost always strike me as more for the ear than for the eye. Though given that this is from a speech, I’m just overthinking it, lol
Ok so ICE bad, but are these expulsions not legitimate? They must be according to some law.
I’ve travelled for work all my life, and fairly regularly violated work limitations of my visas, such as using tourist visas, or using business visas that didn’t allow manual work when I, in fact, did manual work. I didn’t have much choice at the time, but I was aware I was violating the law. If Hyundai, like other employers, forces their worker to act illegally, they should face the consequences.The Koreans are doubly upset because they all had work visas and were invited over to set up the factory. They are all highly trained professionals who were going to train Americans. Instead, they were zip tied like criminals. I hope this has major repercussions
https://www.politifact.com/article/2025/sep/10/south-korea-work-visa-immigration-raid-hyundai-ICE/
I wish I trusted government as much as you do.
No, wait, I don’t.
At the very least, they should rethink purposefully having their workforce here on tourist visas, expired visas, and all the other shenanigans they were playing. Hyundai doesn’t have the moral or legal high ground here. Hopefully South Korea encourages its companies not to break the laws of other nations.
I doubt the veracity of your claims as you’ve provided no proof and it sounds made up.
Sounds like you’re not very educated. Did you read any news articles about this?
Did you?