Good evening. there ^^ ドキドキ

This is Seoul, Korea. 音譜

HaHa.

Today's sky was SO pretty. 合格

But I couldn't just feel happy. 汗

You know, these days, many things are changed between S.korea and N.korea.

I want that there won't a big trouble like a fight or a strong pressure at all.

And economic crisis too.


Anyway, Whether My country, Korea has hard times or not

I'm spending my time doing usual things. ' ㅅ'

Brewing coffee,音譜

Studying CPA stuffs,

Climbing a small mountain behind my house,

Reading a book sometimes.

Nothing changed.あせる


Yeah, I think that's a life.


ペタしてね
뭐.. 이건 아메바에 대한 짧은 단상이라고 볼 수 있겠다.

히로키군ラブラブ 덕분에, 일본 블로그 '아메바'를 하게 되었다.ドキドキ


음,

내가 주로 이용하는 Naver 블로그와 비교했을 때,

네이버 쪽이 좀 더 깔끔하고, 여기는 정신없다 - _-;

아무래도 언어의 장벽이 정신없게 만드는 주 요인일 것 같다는 생각이 들기도 한다;

아 그리고 또 하나의 큰 차이~~!!!

이모티콘 ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋアップアップ


ペタしてね


또 언어의 장벽 추가~~!

통신어체ㅠ_ㅠ

표준말로 써 있어도 잘 모르는데.

에휴 ㅇ_ㅇ



뭐 나름대로 재미도 있구,

일기장처럼 잘 쓰고있다 ㅎ_ㅎ音譜



일본과 우리나라는 우여곡절이 많지만,

그래도 미워할 수 없는 나라다.

개인적인 의견이지만.

가끔 서로 밉살스러워 보이기도 하겠지만,

전부 애증이 아닐까 싶다.ドキドキ


어쨌든 내년이나 내후년,

공인회계사에 합격하여

고연봉에- _-;; 안정적인 나름대로의 꿈의 직장을 잡고 나면

히로키군ドキドキ을 '직접' 보기 위해, 찾아가 보려고 하는데.

철이 없어보이나!? ㅎ_ㅎ


뭐 이건 하나의 핑계고.

사실 일본여행을 해 볼까 한다.

예전부터 일본이란 나라가 나의 이목을 끌었던 건 사실이고,

그래서인지 별 관련도 쓸모도 없는 일본어를 공부하게 된 것도 있고.

그리고, 일본 문학도 참 재밌거든.

혼자하든, 친구랑 하든.

왠지 일본은 여자인 나 혼자 여행해도

안전할 것 같은 기분이 든다.

착각일지도 모르지만.


말이 길어졌다.

이제 자야 내일 또 일찍 일어나지 ㅇ_ㅇ

그럼 모두 Good Night音譜
[Scrap] 2010.05.17
URL; http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE64B50I20100515?type=politicsNews

(Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Saturday called for swift Senate action on a sweeping overhaul of Wall Street rules to "secure America's economic future" as a reform bill moves into the decisive stage next week.




With months to go before November's pivotal congressional elections, Obama pressed a populist theme of helping the "folks on Main Street" as he urged approval of tighter regulations to prevent a repeat of the 2008-2009 financial crisis.

Obama's Democrats and opposition Republicans are continuing to haggle over a slew of amendments, but the bill could come up for a vote in the U.S. Senate by the end of next week and is widely expected to pass.

"The reform bill being debated in the Senate will not solve every problem in our financial system -- no bill could," Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address.

"But what this strong bill will do is important, and I urge the Senate to pass it as soon as possible, so we can secure America's economic future in the 21st century."

The political climate in Washington has turned in favor of the proposed legislation -- which would mark the broadest revamp of the U.S. financial system since the 1930s -- and against industry lobbyists trying to weaken any changes.

Republicans acknowledge a need for reform but are seeking to trim back some Democratic proposals they see as government overreach into the private sector.

Still, Republicans appear increasingly reluctant to run the political risk of blocking passage and being painted as aligned with Wall Street in an election year.

The stakes are also high for Obama. With U.S. unemployment just below 10 percent, Americans are anxious about the country's finances, nudging his approval ratings to around 50 percent and threatening Democratic losses in the mid-term elections.

Seeking to tap into public anger at Wall Street excesses blamed for the recent financial crisis, Obama insisted financial reform would "help stop predatory practices."

He said reform would bolster community banks that have operated by the rules by creating an "even playing field" with larger lenders and would help safeguard small businesses from ever again being victimized by Wall Street risk-taking.

"We'll make our financial system more transparent by bringing the kinds of complex, back room deals that helped trigger this crisis into the light of day. We'll prevent banks from taking on so much risk that they could collapse and threaten our whole economy," Obama said.

"Put simply, Wall Street reform will bring greater security to folks on Main Street," he said.

The U.S. House of Representatives approved a Wall Street reform bill in December. Whatever the Senate produces will have to be merged with the House bill before a final package can be sent to Obama to be signed into law, possibly by mid-year.

(Editing by Paul Simao)