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14 AI perspectives

Lifestyle

The More Americans Avoid Europe, the More China Wins — Flag-Jacking and the Ritual of National Retreat

Flag-jacking — the act of American travelers concealing their nationality abroad by sewing Canadian maple leaf patches onto their backpacks — has surged to its largest scale since the Vietnam War era, signaling a deep rupture in how U.S. citizens perceive their national identity on the global stage. American bookings for European flights are down 7.3%, while Canadian visits to the United States have collapsed 21%, draining an estimated $4.5 billion from the American economy in 2025 alone. The tourism vacuum left by departing Americans is being rapidly absorbed by Chinese visitors (+28%) and Indian travelers (+9%), pointing to a structural realignment of global tourism geography rather than a temporary cyclical blip. The United States has become the sole country among 184 nations to register a decline in international tourism spending, a data point that transcends travel economics to signal a crisis of soft power and national brand credibility. Examining whether flag-jacking constitutes genuine civic resistance or merely a ritual of personal convenience — one that leaves policy entirely unchanged while gifting cultural ground to rival powers — is both urgent and long overdue.

Lifestyle

The Border Between Ramen and Ramyeon Has Already Dissolved — And That's Actually a Good Thing

Korean instant noodles have surpassed 110 billion yen in cumulative sales in Japan — the country that invented ramen — marking a cultural inversion that goes far beyond food export statistics. Nongshim's Shin Ramyeon is growing at over 20 percent annually in Japan while Samyang's Buldak recorded 2.35 trillion won in 2025 revenue, a historic high driven by 65 percent export growth, with 77 percent of those exports coming from the Buldak product line alone. Behind Korean noodles' advance lies a structural crisis in Japan's domestic ramen industry, where 2024 saw a record 79 ramen shop bankruptcies as ingredient costs surged 41 percent since 2020 and consumer resistance to crossing the so-called "1,000-yen wall" eliminated any path to price increases. This essay argues that Korean ramen's conquest of Japan is not simply a food export achievement but a new and more durable form of soft power — quieter than K-pop, unsubsidized by government strategy, and built entirely on spontaneous consumer choice driven by the K-content flywheel. As the global instant noodle market grows toward $98 billion by 2032, the national-identity distinction between "ramen" and "ramyeon" is dissolving in real time, and that dissolution is one of the more revealing cultural stories of this decade.

Lifestyle

One TikTok Meme Became State Law, Flipped Restaurant Menus, and Launched a War Over the Oil on Your Plate

Seed oils — branded the 'Hateful Eight' on social media — have gone from TikTok punchline to actual state law in Louisiana and Texas, an unprecedented leap from meme to legislation. Harvard, the American Heart Association, and Johns Hopkins consistently present scientific evidence that seed oils actually lower cardiovascular risk, yet 43% of American consumers already choose restaurants based on cooking oil, rising to 52% among 18-to-34-year-olds. The MAHA movement's successful weaponization of a meme into policy represents a 21st-century war on the kitchen table, born from the widening chasm between science and public perception.

Lifestyle

Asia's 50 Best 2026: The Reason Your Favorite Restaurant Didn't Make the List Has Nothing to Do With Taste

The Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026 rankings have dropped, and once again the structural contradiction of 318 anonymous voters deciding the hierarchy of Asian gastronomy has surfaced. Alongside the cultural significance of Hong Kong's The Chairman claiming the number one spot, this piece examines how the economics of rankings have created a deepening polarization within the fine dining ecosystem.

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