Showing posts with label boycott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label boycott. Show all posts

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Sochi: the most corrupt and immoral Games since Hitler



http://www.loe.org/shows/segments.html?programID=14-P13-00005&segmentID=2
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/vladimir-putin/10581829/Sochi-Olympics-Nothing-but-a-monstrous-scam-says-Kremlin-critic.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zmzJ1ndHOQ

After Salt Lake, Athens, and Beijing, we know that we can't count on the Olympics for integrity, fiscal resp., and principles - but they've outdone themselves this year. These games will cost over $50B (what is reported to the public at least)... that is more than the combined value of all NBA teams, or the GDP of Bulgaria. Just for a month of sports that only about 10% of the world cares about (or knows how to play, or can even afford to play). Studies have shown that it's very hard to achieve positive ROI on a major modern sporting event, but that price tag is just ludicrous. It's like Iraq with less murder and torture - fat gov't contracts handed out to political pals to build bridges to nowhere with no durable value to the country. Abused Russian people deserve better - from their homophobic, megalomaniac leader especially, but from us too. 

Maybe the best thing we can do is boycott such travesties, and petition our leaders to protest. That might send a message to the event organizers/int'l orgs that their "customers" won't tolerate their horrible choice of host nations (and the social-environmental implications). Same goes for Brazil this summer for the World Cup.

I would hope the celebrity athletes and coaches would boycott as well, but I understand that their careers are short and they don't have many chances to medal. Even Jesse Owens went to compete in Nazi Germany (but at least by winning, he made a social statement - it's not like Shaun White winning another medal will do anything for gay rights or anti-corruption). I know there is no chance that NBC and other media companies would boycott, because they lust after the ad revenue. Forget moral principles, they would probably love to buy the rights to broadcast the hunger games (hosted by the Donald of course) if the audience was big enough.

Sochi is just Putin pissing on a tree trunk like a junkyard dog, or a spoiled brat on a global reality TV show. We shouldn't indulge him any more. We boycotted Soviet games in the past when that nation had more moral leaders than Putin.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

The Zimmerman jury may have gotten it right, but now what?

Most of us probably believe that it was wrong for Zimmerman to confront Martin in the way he did, and it was a tragedy that the boy died. But in terms of a conviction, unfortunately there just wasn't enough there to prove the strict definitions of 2nd degree murder and/or manslaughter. It's not like he killed Martin outright... he first put himself in dangerous proximity, and escalated into some sort of verbal and physical altercation. He's misguided and showing poor judgment, but not a murderer. Obviously he is a child killer, and yet a hero to many.

What about the trial's greater implications? Our culture, racial policies, and gun laws were not on trial - but they are still open issues for debate. Obviously after Oscar Grant, Martin, and many other examples, I assume the black community and many other Americans are tired of seeing young, lower income, unarmed people of color getting beaten or killed, while the lighter-skinned, gun-toting perpetrator is acquitted or given little punishment (in their opinion). Anger is high and some may want to lash out violently. On the other side, Zimmerman and his supporters may expect that. These folks probably favor concealed-carry, stand-your-ground, unrestricted 2nd amendment, and other legal provisions that enable firearms to be lawfully used for more self defense and vigilante scenarios. So they may want to carry their weapons more often, and may be even more paranoid when confronted by others whose appearance scares them. That's a volatile combination of circumstances.

We discussed this a bit before, but as you'd expect I find such laws that enabled Zimmerman to legally create the tragic situation in Sanford fairly outrageous. We know almost any adult can purchase a gun in America with next to no "qualifications". And in states like FL, you can easily get a permit (if you even need a permit) to carry your gun loaded in public - as long as you are not intoxicated, brandishing it so others feel threatened, etc. Americans get buy guns easily and have loaded guns almost everywhere in a variety of situations - thereby increasing the likelihood that a Sanford type killing, an outright crime, or an accident occurs.

Adding SYG to that, in incidents where conflict ensures and the shooter feels in danger, he/she can use deadly force as self defense and be legally justified. Premeditated malice and aggression aside, it barely matters how you got into the mess (especially when evidence is sketchy, if it's even relevant/admissible), as long as you can prove you were under attack - you have "a license to kill". Does that mean any moron can start shit with anyone else, and when they get in over their head and things go south, they can "kill their way out of trouble?" What if 2 armed people get into a fight? Whoever shoots first under threat will be the "winner". So will that incentive people in those states to be even more hasty and trigger-happy?

http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national/2012/03/23-other-states-have-stand-your-ground-laws-too/50226/

FL and 23 other states have some sort of SYG. They are basically every state below the Mason-Dixon, plus IL, WA, NV, OR. Maybe the best way for blacks and concerned citizens to "have their revenge" against the system and our gun-happy, conflict-happy culture is to boycott. Move out of those states, don't do business with them, don't contribute tax dollars to them. If enough people do it, leaders will start to get the picture and maybe change the laws/norms. Plus, with all the non-pistoleros leaving those communities, the only people left will be the Zimmerman types. It will be more likely that they get into armed altercations with each other, thereby reducing the pro-gun population and creating a lot of negative press for the gun/vigilante/self defense crowd. Because maybe that is the only thing that will really move the debate - when a non-poor, fair-skinned, pro-gun shooter kills a non-poor, fair-skinned, pro-gun victim. Unfortunately it seems that dead black people piled up to the ceiling (forgive my crudeness, but just look at the Chicago and Oakland cases) is not enough to get America and its lawmakers to care.

Or another option is, "if you can't beat em, join em". Zimmerman opponents can start acting like him. Imagine if Martin was an adult and went through the necessary steps to carry in public. Once Zimm. was following him and starting stuff, he could have just killed Zimm. and the trial would have been inverted. It would have been even easier to argue self defense since Zimm. was armed, was the instigator, and his prior 911 call showed prejudice and intent to confront aggressively. With Mark O'Mara, the gun lobby, AND the NAACP defending Martin, no way he would be convicted (unless the FL justice system is truly racist). Maybe that is what is needed, legally armed black people fighting back and killing gun-toting racial profilers who mess with them? Obviously I'm being facetious here, but my point is: look at what these laws and culture could lead to. A nation where almost everybody has the legal authority to be armed in public (with ever more deadly weapons), and use those arms to lawfully kill in an increasing multitude of situations, is not a freer or better society. It's goddam Tombstone. And it won't make your suburb any safer, it won't protect your kids from a deranged school shooter (who likely outguns and outcrazies you), and it won't defeat Al Qaeda or our tyrannical socialist gov't.

So yeah, I would advocate the boycott approach before the Tombstone approach.

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For the record, they also compared SYG to Tombstone - but I called it first. ;) They also showed footage of Zimm's brother discussing how George would have to look over his shoulder for the rest of his life because people may want to take matters into their own hands. It was pathetic that the brother didn't grasp the irony.


Also, CNN aired an interview with one of the anonymous jurors (who already landed a book deal, but it got cancelled after her interview aired since it seemed wrong to profit from what some see as a blatant injustice), a married middle-aged white female gun owner. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vvrpp4SODBE
http://www.npr.org/2013/07/16/202566703/juror-b-37-speaks-out-about-zimmerman-verdict

When asked if race played a role in Zimm's actions, the juror said that, "[it wouldn't have mattered to Zimm if Trayvon was] Spanish, white, Asian..." Do we want to trust the verdict in a racially-charged trial to a person who can't even articulate the major ethnic groups? Heck, as the defense joked, the main criterion for juror eligibility was a lack of prior knowledge of the incident. This was the case with previous high-profile trials as well, but that's kind of scary that the court has to select the most un-informed and apathetic among the juror pool. The interviewed juror also admitted that she did not follow the judge's orders when coming to a verdict. The judge ruled to disregard the lead investigator's (Chris Serrino, sp?) testimony that he felt Zimm was truthful, yet the juror said that quote made "a big impression" on her decision because of Serrino's experience. Justice definitely served. Lastly, the juror said that of the 6 women, 2 initially believed Zimm to be guilty of manslaughter, but eventually were persuaded to join the acquit crowd (1 of the 6 abstained or still supported manslaughter). You'd think that harassing and brandishing a firearm to an unarmed minor on a public street would break some sort of US law.

Like the Ted Stevens and OJ trials, I'm getting tired of prosecutors wetting the bed. Trying to make a name for themselves or under external pressure, they over-reach with big charges that may not have enough evidence to support them. And then they totally botch the execution too. How can they agree to a jury of all women and all having common ethnicity with the defendant, but not the victim? How can they not prepare their witnesses better (the defense basically turned them over), and not put Zimm on the stand himself? I am fairly ignorant about legal matters, so I'm sure other factors were at play, but I'd like to see an explanation or expert evaluation of their decision/performance. Just not from a juror's book deal.


I think this trial did produce a conviction on US society. We are guilty of tolerating and perpetrating a culture of hostility, fearful stereotyping & over-reactions, shoot first, and "violence solves problems" that will continue to result in civil rights violations, misunderstandings, and tragedies (if not actual crimes).

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From all objective legal accounts this couldn't have gone any other way.  The judge instructed them that Z was within his legal rights, per Florida state law, to follow Martin, approach him, etc.  And once a scuffle ensued if he felt threatened it would not be manslaughter to use his weapon.  Florida does not require you to retreat as part of a self defense act.  Given no other witnesses to the activity, relatively poor circumstantial evidence, etc how could someone not have a reasonable doubt that this was a legal act as opposed to manslaughter?  Are we saying there is NO reasonable doubt that Z started the fight?

 
And the ethnicity thing is killing me.  So all the women were half hispanic?  Is there some evidence somewhere that this was motivated by race?  Zim has previously stood up in city council to berate a white officer whose son attacked a black homeless man.  Not a particularly racist thing to do.  Profiling sure, i'll grant that, but those aren't the same thing.  

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I agree with you about the verdict - it's pretty much a slam-dunk actually, and the prosecution were morons for trying to pin him with murder 2. By the strict interpretation of the law, he was not guilty. I am not sure how the verdict would have changed in NY or CA. I never said that Z was a racist and I do think his actions were motivated mostly by a "civic duty" to protect his community from crime. But from a jury standpoint, it's hard to believe that race played zero role in their decision making process, even though the lawyers did their best to avoid the issue. Humans have biases, so if we can't remove them, at least we should balance them out and cancel them out. I'm not saying the jury was all racist either, but we tend to relate better to people who are similar to us. Isn't that why it's rare to have a very homogeneous jury? I don't know why it was only 6 instead of 12 people (maybe FL law?), but I think a mixture of backgrounds is often good to avoid tunnel vision and groupthink. Despite the racial makeup of the jury, 2 of them were initially favoring manslaughter for Z anyway, but were persuaded to change.

You'd think that harassing and brandishing a firearm to an unarmed minor on a public street would break some sort of US law (or it should, right?). I guess this trial did produce a conviction of US society. We are guilty of tolerating and perpetrating a culture of hysterical hostility, fearful stereotyping & over-reactions, shoot first, my gun is my freedom, and "violence solves problems" that will continue to result in civil rights violations, misunderstandings, and tragedies (if not actual crimes). 

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Listen to the 911 call and tell me about harassing him.  And no one has any factual reports that he pulled his gun anytime but the last minute as far as i know.  


He would be guilty for sure in ca or ny or any of the more narrowly defined self defense law states.


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I have not been following the case closely, but while Martin was on the phone with his friend, couldn't you hear him say [presumably to Z], "Why are you following me?" That could suggest there was harassment (and who knows what else happened that wasn't caught on tape?). 

Based on Z's initial 911 call and his motivation for being a "watchman", I think we can assume that he prejudged Martin and confronted him with the intent to run him out of the neighborhood (ostensibly to thwart a crime), possibly by intimidation/threat.

I wasn't a witness obviously, but I find it doubtful that Martin would just suddenly attack an adult stranger who approached/followed him on a dark night. So I think it's plausible that Z did something to scare/provoke Martin, and made the teen feel the need to react and "defend himself" first. But that's the problem with fighting... how do you differentiate between attack and defense, because a punch is a punch? Even straddling and pummeling a person could be defensive, if the purpose was to prevent the person on the bottom from drawing a deadly weapon.

There are "good Samaritan" laws to prevent people trying to help in a volatile situation from getting sued later if they accidentally did harm. But I think there are limits to that protection, like gross negligence voids it. I would hope that SYG laws have limits too - if the shooter puts him/herself in a bad situation and escalates it (if that can be proven), then he/she is no longer covered. Otherwise the law incentivizes violent confrontation, regardless of intent. What if I went into Little Havana with a loudspeaker and started to yell pro-Castro slogans? Assuming people took enough offense to approach me with demonstrable intent to physically harm, I can just shoot them legally? I am not an expert in SYG so maybe there are such common sense limits.


And just when you thought things couldn't get any more effed up in FL, this is another case where a jury (racial composition unknown) found a woman defendant ineligible for SYG protection. She is a PhD, mother of 3, with no prior record, and black. She previously took out a restraining order against her husband for abuse. During their latest alleged altercation, she retrieved a gun in her home and fired a warning shot (according to her) into the ceiling to keep him away. But the court decided that she could not prove she was in imminent danger, so instead she was sentenced to 20 YEARS. I am not sure what the charge was, possibly attempted murder of the husband and/or child endangerment (since their kids were present). This is because FL has mandatory minimum sentences for crimes involving guns (10 years if you have a gun, 20 if you fire it). Some have alleged that mandatory minimum sentences are immoral and maybe racist. So I guess FL enables "lawful" gun owners to have a lot of leeway, but throws the book at gun "criminals". Based on circumstance, economics, etc., one of those populations is predominantly darker skinned and poorer.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2143313/Abused-Florida-wife-sentenced-20-YEARS-firing-warning-shot-husband-Stand-Your-Ground-defence-fails.html

Monday, February 15, 2010

Vancouver Olympics discussion

Well sadly, to the IOC and their corporate backers, these athletes are just expendable meat. Especially a nobody from Georgia doing the luge. Not that I think it's right to have such little safety precaution, but this is the luge we're talking about. It's dangerous by nature, like ski jumping. What are they going to do, pad the whole ski jump landing strip with bubble wrap? These stupid winter sports have risk, and still the athletes want to do it. What can we do? Their motto is higher, faster, stronger, whatever. They want to blaze down an ice track at 90 mph with no body protection. But as M said, it would be safer if the track was out in an open snow field with no solid objects to crash into. 

Of course bad press like this may eat into their profits and perceptions of the Olympics, or maybe they actually like the buzz it's generating. Let's be honest; would we have watched the luge if the death didn't take place? Heck I may not even watch the luge now since NBC are Nazis with event scheduling, and frankly the event is not too interesting to me. But for "human interest", I am sure they will replay luge on prime time, as well as every Georgian athlete, even if they suck. But man, can you imagine what is going through the other lugers' heads when they run the track?

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It was on youtube and has been taken down.  It was a 480P Television feed; you hear a hollow metallic thud, then the cry of the coach.  To me the guy is dead instantly and the coach knew he was gone but they say he passed at the hospital.  F1 has an unwritten rule where no driver dies on the track and I think luge may have the same.
I never considered this sport very dangerous b/c of the lack of deaths.  I think it comes down to track design but we'll see what they blame it on.

Expendable meat is right Tim but it's everywhere.  In a bid to increase ratings Nascar has changed the rules to allow bump drafting, and larger restrictor-plates for Daytona.  Which means more high speed crashes in a sport riddled with deaths.  

I'm not surprised when it comes from Nascar but the IOC needs re-evaluate themselves.  They have some new downhill ski sport where multiple athletes race together.  It sounds and is dangerous, with risk increasing when multiple racers jockey for position.  I heard a news report on NPR talking about the dangers of it.  While they were conducting an interview at a qualification event a crash occurred and a guy was paralyzed. 

If you hang the chance of a gold someone will take on the challenge no matter what the risk.  IOC can't wash their hands of this.
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Yeah certainly it's not just the Olympics - pro sports are our Roman Coliseum. Even NFL, as the players get bigger and stronger, they are hitting each other so hard that concussions are a big deal now even with better equipment tech. And some big lineman always passes out during summer training camp - especially at the college/HS levels.


Wow that "skiing motocross" sounds ridiculous. Are they trying to one-up the X-Games? But as you said, the fact that deaths are so rare in the Olympics shows they must be doing something right safety-wise. At least no one got gatted during biathalon. 
 
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I hope that the Olympic committee takes this Georgia death and changes things so we do not see this in future Olympic games.  Obviously, safety measures must be higher, especially in the fastest track in the world where turns go up to 95 miles per hour and athletes get concussions in practice.  Additionally, maybe we should consider trials for countries to get into the Olympic games in the first place.  I think it is a nice gesture that every country is represented in the games but if these "athletes" cannot compete with the major countries, why do we even consider them?  I understand that a death in the games is a very small percentage.  However, we should not be mourning an athlete in the opening ceremonies - Georgia, Ghana, and other small countries without snow that cannot come close to competing to larger countries like the US, Canada, etc. it is a waste of time for them to be in the Olympics.  Let them watch the Olympics at the homes, practice, and treat it as a challenge to get into the olympics if their is a trial - there should be expectations.
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That's a good suggestion and well put. The "Olympic spirit" of all-inclusiveness, fair play, and such is BS. The elite 10 or so nations win 95% of the medals and world records, and only rich nations can host the Games (which are bad for the environment and maybe even bad financially - look at Greece). As you said, the token Ghana or Jamaica athletes in Vancouver may be heartwarming, but it's kind of a farce. The rich nations spend many times more on training and equipment, plus they scout for the best athletes (or even give immigrants citizenship to get on the team), so really they just bought themselves glory. Where's the sportsmanship in that?


Kind of a funny bitching piece on pro sport from C Hitchens: http://www.newsweek.com/id/233007


And my original bitching from 2008: http://worldaffairs-manwnoname.blogspot.com/2008/05/why-olympics-suck.html 
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I dunno dude; seems a little cynical to say that the Olympic Spirit is "BS"...  All the athletes compete on the same field regardless of how they got there and (short of boxing in Korea) there's no paying for performance once the games begin.


Also, I'm pretty sure there are trials and qualifying rounds well before competition and I have a hard time believing that any nation would send an athlete who is not performing at the same level.


PS:  I think the most alarming thing is that NBC showed the video (without sound) on network tv (in prime-time no less!)...  I thought real death was a media taboo, like "Faces of Death" or "Blood on the Asphault" or something; frankly, I was shocked and dumbfounded that the incident was shown.
 
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Yeah, NBC probably decided between the ratings spike that the footage would generate, and the possible backlash from their decision that may cost ad dollars. And I guess by their estimate, the former was better for the bottom line? Well, they showed Oscar Grant getting shot by BART cops on the evening news too.


Come on, by no means are the rich nations' athletes of the same caliber as the poor nations (in general). I remember in the Nagano games, North Korean speed skaters were using obsolete skates vs. athletes from G8 nations, and of course got their ass kicked. In Sydney, I saw a female sprinter from Vietnam. She didn't even have a uniform with the national colors (literally, it looked like she was wearing a Dri-Fit top and jogging shorts that you get on sale at Big 5), while the US and UK had the fancy Nikes and spandex low-drag body suits. They put her in the outside lane (for the slowest runner), and finished the race many yards behind the winner. Of course these are just anecdotes, but the medal counts tell the story.


There is indirect pay for performance. The top athletes get the endorsement deals, and their national sports programs get corporate sponsors. No one wants to invest in a loser. I am not sure if the US Olympic Team is publicly funded, but I am sure they also depend on private money, donated equipment, travel grants, etc. And the Olympics are not "amateur" competition anymore if Agassi, LeBron, and Ovechkin participate.
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I still think you're buying into something of a fallacy; you've heard the expression "talent is common, discipline is rare", haven't you?  You point speaks more to poor nations not having the means to identify and develop talent than it does to any predictive capacity that a correlation between a nation and its level of sponsorship might hold.


BTW, I think the fact that poorer nations still send athletes makes the Olympics what it is in terms of spirit (i.e. heartwarming rather than a farce); you honestly don't find the effort of athletes from said countries inspiring?
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I would not call is inspiring, more like a waste of our time as larger nations - i think we should have two Olympics going on at the same time, kind of like NCAA basketball does during March with the good teams that make it into the March madness tourney, and the shit teams that don't make it and have to compete against each other in the NIT


We can have a NIT like Olympics for all these poorer countries so they won't feel left out, and then they can still win some medals...even though they wont really mean anything.
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I think discipline and talent are both rare, but at least you can teach discipline (usually).


Well, I think poorer nations have other priorities besides luge and hammer throw. Feed, vaccinate, and educate people first. Of course if a poor nation is blessed with a super athlete like Drogba or Pacquiao (roids allegations and all), then by all means develop and market him or her as an inspirational figure. But the majority of poor nations' Olympians fail miserably, so what did the nation and the athlete get for their investment and trouble? Some cool memories? Though as you said, maybe all nations have a similar chance of producing geniuses, super athletes, etc., but the poorer nations lack the infrastructure to identify, develop, and provide the resources needed for those great ones to realize their potential.


It is a sign that a nation has arrived if it can afford to train athletes to reach the highest levels (like Korea's emergence from the Seoul Games to now). Only rarely do poor nations have great (relatively) athletic programs, like Cuba or Ukraine, and it's probably due to the fact that they invest disproportionately in sport for national pride.


Yeah maybe the NCAA tourney-NIT idea isn't such a bad thing. What is the point of Canada's womens hockey team blowing out Bulgaria 82-0 (it really happened), or the Dream Team killing Angola 90-30? Is that inspirational? Is that the Olympic spirit? Of course the Angolans were just so thrilled and proud to be on the same court as Magic Johnson so it didn't matter to them, but that shows the different expectations. Some athletes are just happy to be there; others want and think they can get a medal.


But for all the money that rich nations invest in Olympic sports, Bahamas and Jamaica have way more medals per capita than the US, China, UK, and Japan. Of course this is because they stick to the sports they are competitive in. They don't just send some Joe Blow with no chance and no experience to do 5000 M speed skating.
 
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That's all true, but on the other hand, I think it's a bit rich to criticize developing countries from participating in the Olympics as wasteful. Sure the money would better spent on vaccines, etc. than on sports, but think of the U.S. How much money do we blow a year on all sports combined (probably at least in the tens of billions)? If you narrow it down to simple government waste on things not related to our most pressing problems, the size of waste is similarly massive - is it really necessary for the government to sponsor state fairs, street parades, statues, parks, NASA etc when there are people who barely have enough to eat in our country?


It's easy to be judgmental about the poor/developing world and what they "should" spend money on, but the fact of the matter is that they have the same desires for entertainment, distraction, failings, etc that we do. There are plenty of people in our own country that would rather buy a big screen TV than buy healthcare or contribute to their retirement fund.


If all that a little entertainment and national pride costs them is a few thousand k, then I say let them have it. America spends way more than that on penis-waving competitions, so proportion wise it's probably even about the same percent of national expenditure. It sucks that it's true, but America, China, the Soviet Union when it was around, and other major countries have made being part of the Olympics a sign that you've "made it" in the world - that you can be on the international stage as equals. So I don't think it's fair to criticize the poor countries for feeling the need to be part of the game the rich countries set up - that's our bad, not theirs.


And as far as only allowing internationally competitive (like top 20 in the world) to participate in the Olympics, I think, would be an even worse idea. The Olympics are already mostly a rich man's game, what a middle finger to the developing world that would be - saying we have this ultra-cool sporting event that all the best nations participate in but you can only participate in it if you're willing to blow half of your poor country's GDP training your athletes. I definitely agree that it's a bad idea to let athletes that will embarrass themselves at the event (letting those participate is basically noblesse oblige). But as long as they're at least moderately competitive, I don't see why they can't participate. They get knocked out in the first heat or whatever so they don't get in the way of the big countries, and it gives their home nation a cheap bit of national pride and unity. And sometimes it changes the face of a sport - witness the Jamaican bobsled team.


The Olympics, even from the start, have been explicitly political. To not see the political impact and the amount of ill-will that it would generate in the developing world if we limited admission would be short-sided, I think.
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Well first of all, the Jamaican bobsled team was all hype played up by Disney, and did next to nothing to advance winter sports interest in the Caribbean (in contrast, Usain Bolt did much more for an already track-crazy nation). Nothing garners interest like a (well marketed) winner. For the record, Cool Runnings (ya mon) crashed in their int'l debut, and failed to qualify for the last 2 Games. Their best result was 14th in Lillehammer though, ahead of the US. It was the equivalent of the US mens soccer team getting to the quarter-finals at the depleted Korea-Japan World Cup: a temporary high that really didn't have a long-term soccer effect on our nation and culture.


Of course it would be terribly undemocratic and undiplomatic to have parallel rich man-poor man Olympics. But that's basically what we have now, except that the IOC charges a fee for poor nations to come to the rich man's table and get humiliated. So why not just cut the crap? For that matter, I wish there was a "second tier" World Cup, where the runner-up nations could get a chance, since a Euro-heavy field of 64 is quite limited (in club soccer, they have the equivalent with the Champions League and lesser UEFA Cup, like the NCAA-NIT).


Sure the Olympians from poor nations are "heroes" back home, and if that is worth the money for "inspiration", heck it's better than buying more AK-47s and government palaces. You know me, I am 100X more critical of anything stupid that rich nations do vs. the poor. But due to their wealth, the rich have a bigger margin for error. We can afford to be more profligate and corrupt (well not really, but we kick the can down the road and pass our problems onto the poor). Bill Gates can waste 80% of his take-home pay on leisure, and still live much more comfortably than I, even if I only spend 10%. But he can, and the onus is on me to manage my lesser resources.


But you are totally right; it's an outrage that we spend billions on F-35s, partially-publicly-financed stadiums, and subsidies for Goldman Sachs' new corporate HQ in NYC while our social safety net and infrastructure crumble, and infant mortality is at Second World rates. This is especially shameful because we supposedly have a "functional democracy" where the people have the power to rectify social injustices and improper appropriations. In countries like Georgia, the people have no idea or say on how their taxes are spent - whether it be on sports or not.


In a perfect world, the Olympics and climate change policy would be similar. The rich nations would subsidize the participation of the poor nations, to make a more equal playing field where everyone benefits. Maybe there could even be a training budget cap or proportional participation based on population size (since I am so tired of nations sweeping medals in some events). The current Olympics are MLB when they should be NFL. Sport is like the casino for the poor. A losing proposition economically, but is romanticized because it gives people a shred of hope that they can defy the daunting statistics and beat the house. Though despite all that, I do not think that the poor nations are adversarial towards the rich, and the Olympics are way more political for the rich nations, as you said. You don't hear about Mexico and Kazakhstan bitching about figure stating judges and other foul play (and just today, the Koreans are mad at the Chinese for pulling a Bellichick: http://sports.yahoo.com/olympics/vancouver/blog/fourth_place_medal/post/China-gets-in-the-head-of-South-Korean-speedskat?urn=oly,219613). The poor are just happy to be there, so there is kind of a touching innocence to that (or it could be read as pathetic naivete). Rich nations (and their unfortunate satellites) do the majority of the boycotting, and the only notable exception was when 26 African nations boycotted the '76 Montreal Games to protest New Zealand's rugby ties to apartheid South Africa (bit of a stretch IMO, since South Africa was already banned by the IOC at the time, but it's their right).


For that matter, don't you think it's also a slap in the face to the Third World that the vast majority of Olympic judges and IOC officials come from the G20? And looking past the Olympics, there is much worse economic apartheid and condescension in the WTO and such.