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heavycola wrote:Player, I disagree fundamentally. The anti-protest voices here in London have been saying the same thing - 'the olympics are not about politics'.
Nonsense. China was given the games partly on the understanding they would improve opnness and human rights in their country. Of course they are politicised.
And now China is cracking down on dissenters and on Tibet BECAUSE of the increased scrutiny the games will bring. IT'S POLITICAL. Not to mention shamelessly commercial - Samsung had taken over Trafalgar Square on Sunday - but that's another thread...
I for one woud not wish the games to be abandoned, for the same reason as you: because the athletes and competitors do not deserve that. A gold-medal winner in Beijing will be an Olympic gold medallist, not a Beijing Olympic gold medallist. But China's behaviour has been appalling. That's what the protests are about. Chinese forces killing tibetans, suppressing their language, culture, freedom of speech... Google Hu Jia. Arrested, wife and child under house arrest, because he dared to feed information about Chinese humna rights abuses to the outside world. How very Olympian of his government.
The games will and should go ahead, but all this bullshit about the Olympics not being political is just daft. This is a golden chance for the world to protest China's human rights abuses, which have recently, in part, been commited because of the forthcoming games. If the Olympics are all about harmony, peace and spirit, then who would we be if we ignored the host country's complete rejection of those ideals? Massive hypocrites, is who.
PLAYER57832 wrote:
I said the Olympics SHOULD be above politics ...
and that those who use it to promote their individual politics do far
more harm than good.
As for the Olympic committee ... Of
course, countries compete, but that is more like business competition
than ideology competition. I am not naive, but the deciding factor was
money, not what the Olympic committee thought or thinks about Tibet,
the Weagers (another minority) or China's policies on human rights in
general. They DO worry about safety and the ability of the country to
provide what is needed on all fronts, but though political views are
generally mentioned, they are not deciders.
I had the
opportunity to actually talk with some athletes from Romania ... the
one communist block country that did not participate in the boycott.
You had to wait until the coach was not around. When the coach was
around, they would not respond, would just stare ahead and ignore any
comments, or (rarely) make a curt nod and then get back to what they
were doing.
A few years later things changed indeed there... and have changed irrevocably in a way the old Soviet has not.
Due to the Olympics? Of course not, but I do think the communication we had
.. not just I, but everyone who had the chance, perhaps added a very
small "straw" to an already heavily loaded "camel's back".
heavycola wrote:[quote
This has always been about communication. How do I, or anyone else, communicate their opinion about the atrocities and repression being carried out by the Chinese government to that same government? By protesting their torch relay. How can we try to communicate our opposition to the the millions of Chinese citizens who might otherwise be kept in the dark by their heavily state-controlled media, and our support to those being repressed? By making the protests, rather than the relay, the main story. It succeeded, too.
A boycott by the athletes would be unfair, pointless, and politically counterproductive.
A demonstration against Chinese brutality and oppressions by thousands of citizens worldwide, however, is the only opportunity we have to get our message across, and we have seized it.
Bring it on, San Francisco.
heavycola wrote: How do I, or anyone else, communicate their opinion about the atrocities and repression being carried out by the Chinese government to that same government? .
Aidan Kerr wrote:a few placards more like millions mate.
PLAYER57832 wrote:How
many times have you REALLY changed your views on anything important
because you saw a few plackards. How many times have you changed your
mind because you had a face to face (or online) discussion with another
individual ... more often a friend?
THAT is my point. Plackards and banners are about making the ones who put them up feel good. REAL change is more often accomplished behind closed doors.
FURTHER,
if you know much about Chinese culture (as you should, since you have a
strong opinion on their actions), then you realize that this is even
more true in China than within the west.
]heavycola wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:How
many times have you REALLY changed your views on anything important
because you saw a few plackards. How many times have you changed your
mind because you had a face to face (or online) discussion with another
individual ... more often a friend?
How many times have you been alerted to the depth and scope of feeling about a particular issue by the scale of a demonstration? How many people around the world will those pictures reach? How many non-English speakers can people reach through, er, chatrooms?
NEVER. ....
And your reference to Blair is incorrect, protests HAVE had an impact on him.
THAT is my point. Plackards and banners are about making the ones who put them up feel good. REAL change is more often accomplished behind closed doors.
Wow, a blanket patronisation. Most of the wavers around me were waving Tibetan flags, an item it is forbidden to own in Tibet itself. But yeah, good point - all those who demonstrated must be selfish, inward-looking ignoramuses. Better for them all to sit at home and start looking for a Chinese state official penfriend online.
I don't dispute your intent or integrity, only your effectiveness. People in China are seeing images of protestors taking the torch from a woman in a wheel chair -- hooligans destroying a proud woman's dream .. Do you REALLY think that was the way to convince folks your cause is just?if you know much about Chinese culture (as you should, since you have a
strong opinion on their actions), then you realize that this is even
more true in China than within the west.
Cultural relativism has its place, but this isn't it. The right to protest, freedom of religion, freedom from torutre, state brutality and murder - these are universal human values, IMO. Ares the imprisonment of dissenters, the placing of children under house arrest and the murdering of protesters Chinese cultural quirks?
Er....
no.[/quote
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