[blind-democracy] Re: The Olympics Are a Colossal Waste and a Shameful Distraction

  • From: Richard Driscoll <llocsirdsr@xxxxxxx>
  • To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2016 21:31:40 -0600

Miriam:

The two words I miss very much are 'responsible' as in I am responsible and 'responsibility' as in I have the responsibility.

Richard

(PS This is late in coming as I have been in Denver CO for three days visiting with son, daughter in law and their adopted son.)


On 8/13/2016 7:44 AM, Miriam Vieni wrote:

Probably, it isn't fashionable to use that word, "sacrifice", in an
interview these days. I imagine these athletes have publicists who advise
them about what to say during interviews. Be upbeat, enthusiastic. Be sure
to say things that will make the viewers feel good about you, your sponsors,
and the games.

Miriam

________________________________

From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Alice Dampman
Humel
Sent: Saturday, August 13, 2016 6:40 AM
To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: The Olympics Are a Colossal Waste and a
Shameful Distraction


Even as I used the word "sacrifice" in the below sentence,
"But to achieve this level of excellence, it takes dedication, hard work,
sacrifice of some things in favor of other things, discipline, focus, and
effort. "
and even with the qualifiers I added, I felt a moment's discomfort about the
word.
This morning, I heard a report that most of the athletes spoken to  about
"sacrifice" said they preferred the word "choice." Sacrifice implies
deprivation, and many of the athletes say they do not feel a deprivation,
they are enriched by what they do. Same goes for musicians, dancers, actors,
all those other things people get up to!

On Aug 12, 2016, at 5:15 PM, Alice Dampman Humel <alicedh@xxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:


        Once again, there is no hard and fast rule here. I think I deleted a
message I started to send in which I referred to Dominique Marciano or
however her name is spelled, a gymnast from a few Olympiades ago.
Apparently, she suffered greatly under an abusive father and coaches, the
famous ones, who did nothing. But, as in music with which you draw a
parallel, there are also kids who love what they do. Then there is that fine
line between doing what parents doing what they think is good for their
child. How many adults say, I'm so glad my parents made me continue with the
piano lessons, or, conversely, I'm so sorry I made such a stink about
practicing and that my parents gave in and let me quit. It can all go any
number of ways. But to achieve this level of excellence, it takes
dedication, hard work, sacrifice of some things in favor of other things,
discipline, focus, and effort. For some the rewards of excellence and maybe
prizes are enough to make it worthwhile. For some, it is the love of the
sport or art itself, be it gymnastics, swimming, music, art, acting,
writing,.
        There have been stories of the looks of bliss on some of these young
athletes' faces as they receive their scores or even before when they know
they've nailed a routine.
        


        On Aug 12, 2016, at 2:43 PM, Miriam Vieni
<miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


                Alice,
                
                You might read Dave Zirin's book, Brazil's Dance With The
Devil which
                responds to some of your points about Brazil and its
history, as well as the
                present situation. But there was another point in this
article which gave me
                pause, and that was what kinds of training children go
through from a very
                young age in order to develop the skills that permit them to
compete and
                whether it is the children who want to go through the rigors
of the training
                or the parents who impose the training on them for their own
self
                gratification. I'm sure that happens sometimes, as it does
in other fields
                such as music. I actually knew a family who had three
children. The father
                was in an auto accident with two of them, the son and one
daughter. The son
                died. The daughter was brain damaged and visually impaired
as a result. The
                younger daughter hadn't been in the car. She was much
younger and had
                musical talent. Her parents groomed her to become a concert
pianist until
                she rebelled and refused to play the piano anymore. I
understand, in
                retrospect, what was driving them emotionally, but to that
little girl, it
                felt like abuse.
                
                Miriam
                
                ________________________________
                
                From: blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                [mailto:blind-democracy-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
Alice Dampman
                Humel
                Sent: Friday, August 12, 2016 1:27 PM
                To: blind-democracy@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
                Subject: [blind-democracy] Re: The Olympics Are a Colossal
Waste and a
                Shameful Distraction
                
                
                So the upshot of this article, which we actually all know,
is that Brazil
                had serious problems before the Loympics came to town, and
the question is
                how much worse has it gotten BECAUSE, as in as a result of
the Olympics?
                What is on the other side of the balance? Have some
improvements in the
                lives of the poor come about? I don't know.
                And to compare Rio, with its pre-Olympic enormous social
problems, to cities
                like London, Atlanta, Tokyo, and other host cities is a
little disingenuous.
                I've also read that the Brazilian and local Rio governments
have been very
                slow to make any demands on the IOC, to take advantage of
whatever economic
                or infrastructure improvements could have been negotiated or
even accepted
                by their city.
                Ah, Ted, I quote your tag line, there are at least two sides
to every story.
                
                Oh, yeah, to comment on something from an earlier post.as
for the idea of
                nation competing against nation, too bad we can't settle our
differences
                this way, that has been a component of the Olympic games
since ancient
                times, and besides the individual athletes, there are teams,
so here we have
                an example of cooperation, teamwork and competition existing
side by side.
                And what is the difference whether people distract
themselves with the
                Olympics every 4 years or with the local baseball, football,
soccer,
                basketball, hockey, teams of the home town every weekend?
                
                On Aug 12, 2016, at 11:42 AM, Miriam Vieni
<miriamvieni@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
                wrote:
                
                
                
                Truthdig
                
                The Olympics Are a Colossal Waste and a Shameful Distraction
                
                
        
http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/rio_olympics_are_a_colossal_waste_and_a_
                shameful_distraction_20160811/
                
                
                
                
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                Posted on Aug 11, 2016
                
                
                By Sonali Kolhatkar
                
                
                
                
                The Olympic torch being carried in front of the Christ the
Redeemer
                statue
                on the way to the opening ceremony of the Summer Games in
Rio de
                Janeiro on
                Aug. 5. (Felipe Dana /
                
        
AP(http://www.apimages.com/metadata/Index/APTOPIX-Rio-Olympics/98bb210281c64
                6229cee14ed7928f84d/1/1) )
                
                
                
                Everyone loves the Olympics. They allow people all over the
world to
                set
                aside their political and religious differences and enjoy a
few
                weeks of
                healthy competition between a few thousand people who have
spent
                years
                honing their skills.
                
                At least, this is what we tell ourselves.
                
                In fact, not everyone loves the Olympics. Often, the poorest
sectors
                of
                society within the host countries experience displacement
and other
                forms of
                oppression as authorities work hard to impress visiting
athletes and
                spectators. In Brazil, the first South American country to
serve as
                the
                international showcase, this was certainly true; more than
20,000
                
        
families(https://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/oct/28/brazil-officials-evic
                ting-families-2016-olympic-games)  were displaced to make
way for
                Olympics-related infrastructure. In fact, the state of Rio
de
                Janeiro, where
                the games are being held, is in such desperate financial
                circumstances that
                state workers are not being paid and health care centers
cannot even
                afford
                to take on the Zika virus crisis. Rio declared bankruptcy
ahead of
                the
                games, and the state's governor declared a "state of
                
        
calamity(http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/2016/06/18/482593048/rios-go
                vernor-declares-state-of-calamity-ahead-of-olympic-games) ."
                
                But the mayor of Rio de Janeiro was quick to assure the
                
        
world(http://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-06-21/berg-moral-bankruptcy-of-the-oly
                mpics/7528680)  that the economic disaster "in no way delays
the
                delivery of
                Olympic projects and the promises assumed by the city of
Rio."
                Apparently,
                delivering basic services to the city's residents is a lower
                priority than
                accommodating the Olympics.
                
                In a recent Dallas News opinion column, Andrew
                
        
Zimbalist(http://www.dallasnews.com/opinion/latest-columns/20160808-andres-o
                
        
ppenheimer-hosting-the-olympics-is-an-ego-trip-for-politicians-and-a-bad-dea
                l-for-citizens.ece) , an expert on the social and financial
cost of
                hosting
                the Olympics, said, "The net outcome of the Rio Games is
that they
                will have
                spent $20 billion, they will receive $4.5 billion in
revenue, and
                they will
                end up with a $15 billion deficit."
                
                While the fireworks and glittering stadiums overshadow the
social
                and
                financial problems of this year's host nation, the facade is
                crumbling.
                Rio's famous
                
        
favelas(http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/brazils-olympics-meet-its-fa
                velas)  are in full view of many venues, and concerns about
                sewage-infested
                waters are so serious that athletes competing in water
sports have
                been
                
        
advised(http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/international/ct-olympic-rowing
                -dirty-water-20160806-story.html)  not to splash in, or
accidentally
                drink,
                the virus- and bacteria-ridden water.
                
                Brazil is hardly an exception in the long line of host
countries
                paying far
                too dearly for the privilege of hosting the games. The
billions
                spent on
                building the required infrastructure rarely translate into
direct,
                long-term
                benefits for the citizens of host countries. Instead,
ordinary
                people pay
                dearly for the fleeting enjoyment of spectators around the
world,
                while
                corporations prosper from building contracts and lucrative
                sponsorship
                
        
agreements(http://www.opensecrets.org/news/2016/08/corporate-sponsorships-of
        
-olympics-make-political-investments-look-like-a-very-good-deal/)
                and
                governments earn little more than bragging rights. This
series of
                
        
photos(http://www.businessinsider.com/abandoned-olympic-venues-around-the-wo
                rld-photos-rio-2016-8)  of abandoned and decaying Olympics
venues
                from host
                cities around the world is a disturbing testament to the
ugly and
                often
                invisible legacy of the games.
                
                In addition to poverty, displacement and poor public health
and
                infrastructure, Brazil is in the midst of its worst
political crisis
                in
                decades, as widely discredited impeachment proceedings
against
                democratically elected President Dilma Rousseff play out in
the
                capital,
                Brasilia. Interim President Michel Temer has painted a rosy
hue on
                the games
                and worked hard to silence political dissent. Security
forces have
                deployed
                stun grenades and tear gas on demonstrators. But
                
        
protesters(https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/brazilian-prote
                
        
sters-censored-at-olympics/2016/08/07/c8dfc014-5cca-11e6-84c1-6d27287896b5_s
                tory.html)  among the crowds of spectators are speaking out,
using
                the
                international spotlight to get their message across. Ahead
of the
                games,
                activists launched a creative and concerted effort to
extinguish the
                Olympic
                
        
torch(http://www.aljazeera.com/news/2016/08/rio-olympics-torch-brazil-160804
                183937431.html)  as it was carried through Rio's streets in
order to
                express
                their opposition to the effort to oust Rousseff. One of the
                torch-bearers,
                an Afro-Brazilian athlete, took a personal risk and exposed
the
                words Fora
                Temer (Out with Temer) emblazoned on his behind, as this
video
                
        
report(https://www.facebook.com/ajplusenglish/videos/774697316005111/?hc_loc
                ation=ufi)  shows.
                
                As for the notion that the Olympics help us set aside our
political
                and
                religious divides for a few weeks, even that is a lie. If
anything,
                the
                games become nationalistic rituals that amplify existing
divides and
                are
                simply an excuse to drape oneself with a flag and beat one's
                favorite enemy
                nation in the arena of sports. Certainly this is better than
actual
                war-but
                rarely, if ever, is it a substitute for war.
                
                On the flip side, the Olympic Games offer yet another
platform to
                display
                all the societal ills we struggle with on a daily basis,
such as
                
        
sexism(http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2016/08/sexism-olympics-katie-led
                ecky-is-amazeballs)  and
                
        
racism(http://racerelations.about.com/od/hollywood/a/Racial-Controversies-An
                d-The-Olympic-Games.htm) . Even the debut of the "refugee
                
        
team(https://www.olympic.org/news/refugee-olympic-athletes-deliver-message-o
                f-hope-for-displaced-people) " at this year's games may do
little to
                humanize the toll of wars (but what about Brazil's own
internally
                displaced
                refugees that the Olympics have generated?). Pentagon
officials who
                draw up
                war plans are hardly going to be moved by the humanity of
Yusra
                
        
Mardini(https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2016/aug/06/yusra-mardini-100m-but
                terfly-heat-win-refugee-olympic-team-rio-2016) , a Syrian
refugee
                swimmer,
                and stop bombing her fellow Syrian
                
        
civilians(https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/worldviews/wp/2016/07/21/an-ai
        
rstrike-in-syria-killed-entire-families-instead-of-isis-fighters/) .
                It may
                cause some individuals in Western nations to think twice
about their
                bigoted
                attitudes toward incoming refugees (or it may amplify
existing
                stereotypes,
                such as those elicited by a hijab-wearing Egyptian
volleyball
                
        
player(http://www.dailynewsegypt.com/2016/08/09/beach-volleyball-player-wear
                ing-hijab-met-criticism-not-fitting-rio-olympics/) ). But
basic and
                fair
                media coverage of the issues refugees face when wars
displace them
                could
                achieve the same end without the high price of the Olympics.

                
                But aren't the Olympics a wonderful venue for young,
talented
                athletes who
                have spent years honing their skills? As the hilariously
prescient,
                satirical video-podcast "Ultra Spiritual
        
Life(http://uncrate.com/video/what-i-love-about-the-olympics/) "
                noted about
                athletes at the Rio Olympics, "I'm grateful that this
15-year-old
                girl had
                parents who were emotionally abusive enough to live through
her.
                Nine hours
                of training every day since she was 3 years old equals
trauma in her
                psyche,
                stress fractures in her legs, but it equals national pride
for me."
                Stories
                about young children in China being trained for the 2012
Olympics
                revealed a
                shocking level of
                
        
brutality(http://www.businessinsider.com/a-chinese-olympian-had-no-idea-her-
                
        
mother-had-cancer-because-her-parents-feared-it-would-disturb-her-training-2
                012-8)  meted out for the national pride of winning a gold
medal.
                Additionally, the financial
                
        
burden(http://blogs.marketwatch.com/paydirt/2012/08/07/the-true-cost-of-maki
                ng-the-olympics/)  of training for the Olympics,
particularly in
                countries
                like the U.S., which does not provide subsidies for
athletes'
                families, is
                huge and often leads to bankruptcy.
                
                Even heartwarming stories of underdogs winning Olympic
medals are
                not worth
                the price of the games. The story of a young Afro-Brazilian
girl,
                Rafaela
                Silva, who hails from the famed City of God favela and won a
gold
                medal(http://www.bbc.com/sport/olympics/37024492) , provided
just
                the
                "inspiration" fodder that many people, including liberals,
like to
                tout. But
                Silva's story plays right into the neoliberal myth of
individual
                success
                being possible for anyone who simply works hard enough. What
about
                the
                broader community from which Silva emerged? Brazil's favelas
are
                among the
                most dangerous places for children to grow up, rife with
poverty,
                drugs and
                violence, and Silva's story has no practical, positive
bearing on
                them. In
                fact, the Olympics only ensure that the state will spend
years
                paying off
                the debt of hosting the games rather than spending the money
on the
                welfare
                of its residents.
                
                Are the games really worth the collective and individual
sacrifice
                that so
                many communities and legions of people pay? Ultimately, the
                Olympics, like
                most global sporting events (such as World Cup soccer),
distract us
                from the
                real work of solving societal ills, divert far too many
resources
                away from
                human needs and amplify nationalist fervor and existing
divides. All
                in the
                service of athletes vying for medals and millions of
spectators who
                wrap
                themselves in flags while cheering them on.
                
                
                
                
                
                
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                The Games
                
                
                
                
                Why It's So Hard for Members of the Military to Speak Out
                
                
                
                
                More Bad News About Water Safety Could Affect Millions of
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