This new case touched on several sensitive issues such as domestic abuse, child sexual abuse and also shed light…
She wanted to escape from her home, like she told the attorneys in episode 5, Korea was a fairytale and perfect society and a dream of hers, and when the option to marry a Korean man came she jumped into it.
Which je whenever Da-Wit wanted her to understand the gravity of things, he emphasised that she was going to lose her visa and this made her panic.
All Kaya wanted was security, which she believed she would find in Korea, and she did. It also shows the many nuances to refugees and residents of a country
I liked episode 3, but episode 4 left me unsatisfied. They raised a complex problem but glossed over the biggest…
They were never going to win that case, not under those circumstances. it’s just like how people here are divided that she shouldn’t have had sex if she was going to get abortion. Hospital could be anti-abortion, but they would have asked why she didn’t go to another, regardless.
The questioning Gang-Hun’s mother faced in the courtroom, coupled with Da-Wit’s boss telling him to wrap things up or his bribery would be exposed, the pressure was mounting even if Da-Wit wanted to ignore it.
Especially in Gang-Hun’s case where his mother was not in the right place physically and emotionally to have…
You say it like everyone is destined to be rich and comfortable, but people are allowed to make bad choices and regret them by making amends before it gets worse. That’s why people use contraceptives
Especially in Gang-Hun’s case where his mother was not in the right place physically and emotionally to have a child. At 16, she was forced to birth the child and worse he came into the world disabled. (Who knows how she came about pregnancy) She should have been given a choice and her choice should have been respected So, yes
Which je whenever Da-Wit wanted her to understand the gravity of things, he emphasised that she was going to lose her visa and this made her panic.
All Kaya wanted was security, which she believed she would find in Korea, and she did. It also shows the many nuances to refugees and residents of a country
bloody hell, they didn’t kiss the brick
Hospital could be anti-abortion, but they would have asked why she didn’t go to another, regardless.
The questioning Gang-Hun’s mother faced in the courtroom, coupled with Da-Wit’s boss telling him to wrap things up or his bribery would be exposed, the pressure was mounting even if Da-Wit wanted to ignore it.
At 16, she was forced to birth the child and worse he came into the world disabled. (Who knows how she came about pregnancy)
She should have been given a choice and her choice should have been respected
So, yes