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Gillmor Gang: Mojo Filter

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The Gillmor Gang — Michael Arrington, Keith Teare, John Taschek, Frank Radice, and Steve Gillmor. Recorded live Friday, March 10, 2017. The Gang blends fake..
The Gillmor Gang — Michael Arrington, Keith Teare, John Taschek, Frank Radice, and Steve Gillmor. Recorded live Friday, March 10, 2017. The Gang blends fake tech news with real media disruption and machine learning-aided AI. Plus the latest G3 (below) with Denise Howell, Francine Hardaway, Mary Hodder, and Tina Chase Gillmor.
@stevegillmor, @arrington, @jtaschek, @kteare, @fradice
Produced and directed by Tina Chase Gillmor @tinagillmor
Liner Notes
Live chat stream
The Gillmor Gang on Facebook
G3: Cuckoo Clock
G3 chat stream
G3 on Facebook

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Basketball: ALBA beendet mit Kantersieg gegen Würzburg Negativserie

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Berlin (dpa) – ALBA Berlin hat nach zuletzt vier Niederlagen in Serie in der Basketball-Bundesliga wieder einen Erfolg gefeiert. Die Berliner gewannen vor 10
Berlin (dpa) – ALBA Berlin hat nach zuletzt vier Niederlagen in Serie in der Basketball-Bundesliga wieder einen Erfolg gefeiert. Die Berliner gewannen vor 10 288 Zuschauern gegen die s. Oliver Würzburg mit 99:75 (52:29).
Beste Werfer bei ALBA waren Bogdan Radosavljevic mit 17 und Dragan Milosavljevic mit 14 Punkten. Insgesamt punkteten sechs Berliner zweistellig.

Similarity rank: 2.2

© Source: http://www.t-online.de/sport/basketball/id_80598806/basketball-alba-beendet-mit-kantersieg-gegen-wuerzburg-negativserie.html
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A New Moment For South Korea

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The unanimous upholding of the President’s impeachment sets a milestone for the young democracy. What’s next?
On Friday morning in South Korea, the eight judges of the country’s Constitutional Court appeared live on national television, sitting solemn-faced in their high-back, red-velvet chairs. Three months earlier, the country’s conservative President, Park Geun-hye, had been impeached by the National Assembly. The court had been tasked with either upholding or overturning the legislators’ decision, and it was now ready to issue its ruling. Lee Jung-mi, the only woman justice, read the entire opinion aloud. The court condemned Park’s “betrayal of the public trust” and emphasized the need to “protect the constitution.” Lee spoke for more than twenty minutes, and then a digital scorecard eclipsed her on the screen: eight votes to uphold the impeachment, zero to overturn.
Outside the courthouse, in Seoul, anti-Park democracy activists greeted the ruling by dancing and marching in spontaneous parades, replete with party hats, balloons, and sparklers. Pro-Park demonstrators gathered as well, in angry crowds, and three people died in the chaos. The ruling had been expected, but Korea is a young democracy, and Koreans have rarely seen such dramatic change occur through the courts, much less through citizen protest. In this case, though, the scale of the President’s misdeeds and the volume of the accompanying outcry—tens of millions of “Candlelight Movement” demonstrators filling city streets—had been impossible to ignore.
The scandal, and Park’s subsequent impeachment, triggered a debate over the nation’s economic, political, and social order. On one side were Park’s supporters—mostly older Koreans, fearful of North Korea, still traumatized by war, and holding fond memories of Park’s father, Park Chung-hee, the “modernizing” military dictator who ran the country in the nineteen-sixties and seventies. On the other were citizens fatigued by the past decade of hard-right rule. The so-called Candlelight Movement came to stand for a broad set of principles: freedom of speech, government and corporate accountability, economic redistribution, and workers’ rights. “Our cause has benefitted from the Candlelight Movement,” Lee Jong-ran, a labor lawyer with the group SHARPS , which advocates for laborers in Samsung’s semiconductor factories, told me on Friday. But, she cautioned, “We can’t say that everything will be fine, post-ouster. We must fix the system.”
Well into Saturday, Park remained cloistered inside the Presidential Blue House, contributing to worries that she might not give up power peacefully. On an evening news show, Chung Doo-un, a former assemblyman in Park’s party, said , “I’d hoped for the impeachment to be upheld, and believed it should be, but when it actually happened, I felt uneasy. This should unite the nation, but I’m worried that we’re getting off to a chaotic start.” Chung was one of many Koreans who condemned Park’s handling of the 2014 Sewol ferry crash, in which nearly three hundred people were killed. Park had remained silent for hours after news of the crash broke, and her failure to respond is widely perceived as her greatest sin in office. To much of the public’s chagrin, the Constitutional Court made only passing reference to the Sewol scandal in its decision.
The Korean constitution requires an election to take place within sixty days of Friday’s ruling, and the various parties represented in the National Assembly are now scrambling to pick their preferred candidates. Among the most popular is Moon Jae-in, a former democracy activist and human-rights attorney who, while Park was in office, led the opposition Democratic Party of Korea. The election will come at a difficult moment, not only for the Korean peninsula but also for East Asia and, indeed, the entire world. Every spring, in an extravagant, costly display, the U. S. and South Korea stage military exercises as a warning to the North (and Japan and China, too). And every spring, North Korea stages its own extravagant, costly missile launches, spurring international scorn. This year, President Trump has been added to the mix, goading Chinese and North Korean leaders on Twitter, while holding hands with Shinzo Abe, the right-wing nationalist leader of Japan. The U. S. has begun to install the controversial THAAD missile-defense system in South Korea, bolstering the dozen U. S. military bases and thirty thousand U. S. soldiers already in place.
Moon, who in the nineteen-seventies, as a college activist, was arrested by Park’s father’s military squads, has opposed installing the THAAD system, and has called for a more conciliatory approach to North Korea. (This stance has invited allegations of Communist ties.) His profile and platform resemble that of the left-wing President he once worked for: Roh Moo-hyun. Roh was also the first Korean President to face impeachment. In his case, the Constitutional Court had ruled in his favor, but as corruption charges mounted against him and his family, he committed suicide in 2009.
All of this history resonates now. “It’s simplistic to say that the Candlelight Movement is a protest that arose just to impeach Park Geun-hye,” Choi Kyung-jun, editor of the citizen-journalism outlet OhMyNews, told me. “It’s a continuation of the democracy demands of the nineteen-eighties. We’re building on the experiences of our predecessors. We compare it to a flower coming into bloom.”

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© Source: http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/a-new-moment-for-south-korea?mbid=rss
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England thrash Scotland 61-21 to retain Six Nations title ‹ Japan Today: Japan News and Discussion

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There’s just no satisfying England coach Eddie Jones. His team had just reaffirmed its dominance of northern-hemisphere rugby by retaining…
LONDON —
There’s just no satisfying England coach Eddie Jones.
His team had just reaffirmed its dominance of northern-hemisphere rugby by retaining the Six Nations in spectacular style, tying New Zealand’s tier-one record of 18 straight wins in the process, when Jones laid down another challenge to England’s players.
“We want to achieve greatness,” Jones said, matter-of-factly. “They are in the dressing room now, they are talking about it. They want to do it.”
For Jones, the 61-21 thrashing of Scotland at Twickenham on Saturday was merely another steppingstone on England’s four-year journey to the top of the world game.
The next task is to beat Ireland in Dublin next Saturday to secure a second straight Grand Slam, a feat only five other teams have achieved.
Then, it’s about knocking the world champion All Blacks off their perch.
“We aren’t beating our chests, saying we are the No. 1 team in the world,” Jones said. “We want to be the No. 1 team in the world and we’re not, so we have to get better.”
England’s record under Jones is now played 17, won 17 after dismantling sorry Scotland in an unexpected mismatch in the 136th Calcutta Cup.
Jonathan Joseph scored three of the hosts’ seven tries as the English recorded their highest points total against their oldest international rival and equaled the biggest margin of victory in this fixture, from 2001.
“We are trying to move away from the tag of plucky losers, but that wasn’t even that,” Scotland captain John Barclay said. “We were useless.”
The Scots were talked up massively in the buildup after impressive wins over Ireland and Scotland but they failed to handle the occasion and the increased weight of expectation. They remain without a win at Twickenham since 1983, and couldn’t get out of southwest London quick enough after their hopes of landing a first Triple Crown in 27 years and a first championship since 1999 were ruthlessly torn apart.
England’s players, on the other hand, took a moment to enjoy their success.
Captain Dylan Hartley walked around the field as darkness fell over Twickenham, holding the Six Nations trophy in one hand and waving to jubilant England fans with the other. Teammates in front of him chatted and laughed.
“We’ll have a couple of quiet drinks tonight,” Jones said, “and then tomorrow night we’ll get together and onto Ireland.”
The English have been slow starters in this campaign. Not here. The game was virtually over by halftime, which England went into leading 30-7.
Scotland’s nightmare first half comprised of hooker Fraser Brown getting sin-binned inside two minutes for a tip-tackle on Elliot Daly, strike runner Stuart Hogg going off for a Head Injury Assessment on 18 minutes and never returning, replacement center Mark Bennett going off on a stretcher, and pitiful wide defense that Joseph skewered with some superb running angles.
Back in the team after being dropped to the bench against Italy last time out, Joseph sped through opposite center Alex Dunbar’s weak tackle 40 meters out with his first touch of the ball and cruised unchallenged over the line in the 3rd.
Owen Farrell converted, kicked two penalties either side of Scotland flyhalf Finn Russell missing touch with a penalty, and played a part in a backline move that saw Joseph break the line, slalom past covering defender Tim Visser and dot under the crossbar.
Behind 20-0 after 25 minutes, it was already getting embarrassing for the Scots. But on their first real attacking opportunity, they went for a lineout instead of kicking for goal and prop Gordon Reid barreled over from close range for a try.
It was brief respite because Farrell booted another penalty and Joseph ran another sensational angle off Farrell’s pop-pass and laid on Anthony Watson — Daly’s replacement — to sprint over just before halftime.
The second half was damage limitation for Scotland but Joseph couldn’t be stopped, completing his hat trick in the 43rd by running onto scrumhalf Ben Youngs’ pass in a move off a scrum.
“Credit to the boys,” Joseph said, “I just ran the lines outside that they created. The holes were there for me.”
Scotland center Huw Jones’ try double, in the 50th and 69th minutes, were blips as England passed the half-century mark with fit-again No. 8 Billy Vunipola rolling over from a maul in the 58th, and Danny Care sniping over in the 72nd and again in stoppage time.
Farrell’s final conversion took him to 26 points and ensured a 40-point margin of victory.
England has an unassailable eight-point lead over second-place Ireland after four rounds.
“We are one year into a four-year project,” Jones said. “We’ve done reasonably well in the first year but we want to get better.”
Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Similarity rank: 1

© Source: https://www.japantoday.com/category/sports/view/england-thrash-scotland-61-21-to-retain-six-nations-title
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Massengrab mit 500 Leichen im Irak entdeckt

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Berichte über ein Massaker an Schiiten, Jesiden und Kurden im Badusch-Gefängnis im Nordirak gab es schon lange. Jetzt wurde das Gebäude aus den Händen d…
Berichte über ein Massaker an Schiiten, Jesiden und Kurden im Badusch-Gefängnis im Nordirak gab es schon lange. Jetzt wurde das Gebäude aus den Händen der IS-Terroristen befreit. Die Milizen machten eine schreckliche Entdeckung. Sie entdeckten ein Massengrab mit etwa 500 Leichen.

Similarity rank: 3.2

© Source: http://www.haz.de/Nachrichten/Politik/Deutschland-Welt/Massengrab-mit-500-Leichen-im-Irak-entdeckt
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IBM QISKit Aims to Enable Cloud-basaed Quantum Computation

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The Quantum Experience team at IBM has started to open source their quantum software QISKit, writes quantum computing and information scientist Jay Gambetta. QISKit allows developers to explore IBM cloud-enabled quantum processor using Python.
The Quantum Experience team at IBM has started to open source their quantum software QISKit, writes quantum computing and information scientist Jay Gambetta. QISKit allows developers to explore IBM cloud-enabled quantum processor using Python.
IBM QISKit includes three main components:
In IBM’s OPENAQSM model, a quantum computation is carried through in four steps:
IBM Quantum Experience aims to make it possible to connect to IBM’s quantum computer via IBM’s cloud and to experiment with or integrate quantum capability into software programs. Quantum computers differ from classical transistor-based computers where there are only two allowed states due to the use of quantum bits, which can be the superposition of multiple states. Quantum computation is touted to be able to efficiently solve problems which are not approachable using ordinary computers, in the field of integer factorization (cryptography), for the simulation of quantum physical processes, the approximation of Jones polynomials , solving Pell’s equation , and others. For some of those problems, quantum computers offer a polynomial speedup over their classical counterparts, which also implies that currently intractable (NP) problems will not convert into tractable problems thanks to quantum computing, only more approachable.

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Senator Cory Booker on tech regulations and social media slacktivism: ‘We cannot get left behind’

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Tech innovation is moving fast, and Senator Booker wants us to keep up.
U. S. Senator Cory Booker from New Jersey isn’t ready to talk about his rumored campaign for presidency in 2020, but he did sit down with Google’s senior counsel on civil and human rights Malika Saada Saar at South by Southwest on Friday to talk about the power of human connection and social justice. Oh, and tech’s influence on modern-day politics during, what he called, one of the most fear-based eras he’s ever seen.
“These [last few months] are some of the darkest moments of my political career, but also some of the most inspiring, thanks in part to social media and other communication tools,” Booker said.
Despite this fear-based climate, we now have access to information quicker than ever thanks to our always-on connected culture, but the key is engagement and what we do with this awareness. Here are three key takeaways of Senator Booker’s SXSW kickoff keynote.
The combination of smartphone video and social media spreads rapid-fire awareness to issues that Booker has been working on for years. He mentioned the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, as an example: Police and criminal injustice has long been a problem, but smartphone videos and social media have brought it into the spotlight.
“A lot of folk are just now getting woke to what’s going on,” he said.
And that’s OK—Booker is glad to bring more people into the fold. But he worries that awareness will just stop there.
“Our feeds are powerful. Be involved as a digital activist, but do real-life actions alongside the online sharing. Then, post about it—your actions will influence others.”
Some of the biggest social movements of the age started out as small online communities, and they never would have been able to reach the growth without the social media boost. Black Lives Matter started as an online love letter to the black community, and the Women’s March on Washington started as a Facebook post, Saar pointed out.
But while these communities have activated for social good, some don’t grow in quite the same way. The conversation shifted to one of the hot-button issues of the 2016 election: the social media echo chamber.
Booker worries that we’re just hearing each other and agreeing—“Nothing is going to change, unless we do,” he said—which is why he feels we have an obligation to seek other views, citing his own media consumption habits as an example.
“At the end of a long day, all I want to do is put on Rachel [Maddow], but I can’t just listen to the people that agree with me,” Booker said. “I’m going to turn over to Fox to see what other Americans think, and PBS to see what’s going on outside the U. S.”
Besides social media advances, Booker wants to see the rest of the tech sector reach its fullest potential, and to do that, he thinks the U. S. government needs to ease up on regulations.
“We’re not moving at the speed of innovation due to regulations,” he said, adding that because of this, key industries are leaving the U. S. to work on projects in other countries where the rules aren’t as strict. For example, the Federal Avian Administration has hindered drone innovation to the point where drone companies are leaving the U. S. to test and build in Europe.
“We’re being left behind on everything from next-generation nuclear energy to driverless cars and biologics,” Booker said, “and we cannot get left behind.”

© Source: http://www.itnews.com/article/3179824/sxsw/senator-cory-booker-on-tech-regulations-and-social-media-slacktivism-we-cannot-get-left-behind.html
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今もあふれる思い 各地で鎮魂祈る

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東日本大震災から6年となった11日、 各地で追悼行事が営まれた。 東京では政府主催の 追悼式もあった。 関連死を含む死者は1万9416人、 行方不明者2553人。 地震発生時刻の 午後2時46分、 多くの 人たちが大切な人に鎮魂の 祈りをささげ、 古里の 復興を誓った。
東日本大震災から6年となった11日、各地で追悼行事が営まれた。東京では政府主催の追悼式もあった。関連死を含む死者は1万9416人、行方不明者2553人。地震発生時刻の午後2時46分、多くの人たちが大切な人に鎮魂の祈りをささげ、古里の復興を誓った。
「おじいちゃん、おばあちゃん、戻って来て」。宮城県石巻市であった慰霊碑除幕式。粉雪が舞う中、市立釜小5年、阿部充樹さん(11)は、津波で亡くなった祖父孝衛さん(当時72歳)と祖母とく子さん(同64歳)に心の中で呼びかけた。
あの日、充樹さんは職場から駆け付けた会社員の母(41)に連れられ自宅の2階に上がって助かったが、祖父母は逃げ遅れて帰らぬ人となった。「5年間しか一緒に生きられなかったけど、次の運動会は2人が見てくれている気がする」。6年生の運動会では、綱引き大会で活躍する姿を天国の2人に見せるつもりだ。
サーフィンのスポット、仙台市若林区の深沼海岸。市内に住む介護福祉士、曳地俊尚さん(36)は穏やかな海を見つめながら、「いつか地元でサーフィンができますように」と祈った。津波で自宅が流され、多くの知人も失った。恐怖と犠牲者への鎮魂で、まだ古里の波には乗れない。
「子育てに迷ったら、お父さんやお母さんだったらどうする?」。岩手県大槌町の曹洞宗吉祥寺の慰霊碑除幕式に参列した盛岡市の川嶋裕子さん(44)は、津波にのまれた父倉本謙吾さん(当時65歳)、母光子さん(同63歳)に問いかけた。父は腕のいい大工で、仕事の合間に漁に出かけた。母は料理上手だった。「娘たちを船に乗せてくれたり、おいしい物を食べさせてくれたりしたね」
津波にのまれた宮城県南三陸町の町防災対策庁舎。牧野駿さん(78)の長男で町職員だった典孝さん(当時46歳)はここで犠牲になった。息子の名が刻まれた慰霊碑の前で「亡くなった人を一生忘れない。住みやすい町にするのは生かされた者の仕事だ」と誓った。
東京電力福島第1原発の北5キロ圏にある福島県浪江町請戸で行方不明者の手掛かりを探していた警視庁巡査長の鈴木弘(ひろむ)さん(29)は「みんなが笑顔で帰れる町になってほしい」と祈った。全国の警察から福島に派遣され捜索に携わった警察官の一人。同町出身の鈴木さんは警視庁から県警に出向しているが、古里の再生に役立とうと今春、県警に移る。
午後2時46分、福島県南相馬市小高区の墓地にサイレンが鳴り響いた。津波で曽祖母と祖父母の3人を亡くし、50キロ以上離れた避難先で暮らす小学5年の村田日和(ひより)さん(10)が「生まれ変わっても3人に会えますように」と手を合わせた。
原発事故による避難指示は昨夏に解除された。でも、避難先での生活の方が長くなった日和さんは「友達と離れたくないから、(南相馬に)引っ越したくない」。小さな心は揺れている。【高井瞳、加藤栄、野口麗子】

Similarity rank: 3.5
Sentiment rank: -3.1

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В ВСУ объяснили, почему военный вертолет приземлился на площади Чернигова

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КИЕВ. 11 марта. УНН. Пилот вертолета, приземлившегося на площади в Чернигове, отрабатывал элементы посадки в городской зоне. Об этом в комментарии телеканалу …
“Пилот должен отрабатывать различные элементы посадки и взлета в разных условиях. Посадка в городской зоне – было одной из задач этого пилота. Наземные службы, работающих по воздушным целям внизу, они четко видят этот объект и готовы адекватно среагировать в случае необходимости. .. все эти полеты, все эти маневры проводятся ради подготовки летного состава, ради отработки опыта работы в городской зоне “, – сказал он.
Р. Юрчило также объяснил, почему после приземления в вертолета сел генерал.
“Командующий проверил с воздуха работу наземных служб”, – сообщил он.
Р. Юрчило также отметил, что такая проверка проводится постоянно.
“Такая работа проводится постоянно. Особенно сейчас, когда ведутся боевые действия на востоке нашей страны. Мы должны быть готовы к любой форс-мажорной ситуации с воздуха в любой части нашего государства”, – подчеркнул он.
Спикер также отметил, что “выполнение этого элемента проходило с четким соблюдением мер безопасности”
На вопрос ведущей, предупреждали ли об этом горожан с тем, чтобы они не очень удивились, когда увидят военный вертолет на центральной площади города, он ответил: “В Чернигове ранее было авиационное военное училище и сегодня там находится государственный научно-испытательный центр ВС. Ранее там полеты были очень часто, потому что когда функционировало военное училище, самолеты летали почти ежедневно. Люди просто отвыкли ».
Напомним, 10 марта около двух часов дня на Красной площади Чернигова сел военный вертолет .

Similarity rank: 5.5

© Source: http://www.unn.com.ua/ru/news/1650603-u-zsu-poyasnili-chomu-viyskoviy-vertolit-prizemlivsya-na-ploschi-chernigova
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S. Koreans celebrate Park's removal, but ousted leader silent

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A day after a court removed her from power over a corruption scandal, ousted South Korean President Park Geun-hye maintained her silence on Saturday as her opponents and supporters divided the capital’s streets with massive rallies that showed a nation deeply split over its future. Park has…
A day after a court removed her from power over a corruption scandal, ousted South Korean President Park Geun-hye maintained her silence on Saturday as her opponents and supporters divided the capital’s streets with massive rallies that showed a nation deeply split over its future.
Park has been unseen and unheard from since the Constitutional Court’s ruling on Friday, which ended a power struggle that had consumed the nation for months. Park, whose fate was left in the court’s hands after her parliamentary impeachment in December, has yet to vacate the presidential Blue House, with her aides saying they need more time to prepare for her return to her private home in Seoul.
Carrying flags and candles and cheering jubilantly, tens of thousands of people occupied a boulevard in downtown Seoul to celebrate Park’s ouster. Meanwhile, in a nearby grass square, a large crowd of Park’s supporters glumly waved national flags near a stage where organizers, wearing red caps and military uniforms, vowed to resist what they called a “political assassination. ”
Police had braced for violence between the two crowds after three people died and dozens were injured in clashes between police and Park’s supporters after the ruling on Friday. Nearly 20,000 police officers were deployed on Saturday to monitor the protesters, who were also separated by tight perimeters created by hundreds of police buses.
The anti-Park protesters shouted “The candles have won! ” and “Arrest Park Geun-hye! ” as they began marching toward the Blue House. The protesters, who held candles during their massive evening demonstrations in recent months, loosely call themselves the Candle Force.
The court’s decision capped a stunning fall for the country’s first female leader. Park rode a wave of lingering conservative nostalgia for her late dictator father to victory in 2012, only to see her presidency crumble as millions of furious protesters filled the nation’s streets.
While the ruling might have irrevocably derailed Park’s political career, analysts saw defiance in her silence, saying that Park was perhaps hoping to use the growing anger of her followers to rebuild support.
“By being quiet, she’s making it loud and clear that she won’t accept the court’s ruling,” said Yul Shin, a professor at Seoul’s Myongji University. “Nobody knows when she will leave the Blue House, but maybe she wanted to see how large the crowd was tonight at the pro-Park rally. ”
The ruling allows possible criminal proceedings against the 65-year-old Park — prosecutors have already named her a criminal suspect — and makes her South Korea’s first democratically elected leader to be removed from office since democracy replaced dictatorship in the late 1980s.
It also deepens South Korea’s political and security uncertainty as it faces existential threats from North Korea , reported economic retaliation from a China furious about Seoul’s cooperation with the U. S. on an anti-missile system, and questions in Seoul about the Trump administration’s commitment to the U. S.-South Korea security alliance.
South Korea must hold an election within two months to choose Park’s successor. Liberal Moon Jae-in, who lost to Park in the 2012 election, currently enjoys a comfortable lead in opinion polls.
Kim Yong-deok, the chief of the National Election Commission , said Saturday that the election would be managed “accurately and perfectly” and urged the public to participate in a vote that would “determine the fate of the Republic of Korea,” referring to South Korea’s formal name.
The Constitutional Court accused Park of colluding with longtime confidante Choi Soon-sil to extort tens of millions of dollars from businesses and letting Choi, a private citizen, meddle in state affairs and receive and look at documents with state secrets. Those allegations were previously made by prosecutors, but Park has refused to undergo any questioning, citing a law that gives a sitting leader immunity from prosecution.
It is not clear when prosecutors will try to interview her.
Prosecutors have arrested and indicted a slew of high-profile figures over the scandal, including Choi and Samsung’s de facto chief, Lee Jae-yong.
Park’s lawyer, Seo Seok-gu, who had previously compared her impeachment to the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, called the verdict a “tragic decision” made under popular pressure and questioned the fairness of what he called a “kangaroo court. ”
Some of Park’s supporters reacted with anger after the ruling, shouting and hitting police officers and reporters with plastic flag poles and steel ladders and climbing on police buses. Police and hospital officials said three people died while protesting Park’s removal, including a man in his 70s who died early Saturday after collapsing near the court.
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Associated Press writers Hyung-jin Kim and Foster Klug contributed to this report.

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