So not merely are the butchers of Beijing going to severely restrict internet access to journalists covering the imminent display of Chinese nationalism, but the IOC knew all along that they would, but thought it convenient to lie about it.
Quelle surprise. Come on people. What did you expect from the International Olympic Committee? An organisation that is entirely devoted to money, an organisation synonymous with corruption, an organisation at home with the world’s most barbarous regimes … an organisation that regards “racewalking” as a sport?
So much for the media being a key part of the “Olympic movement”.
Kevan Gosper, one of the movement’s chief apologists, claims to have been lied to and betrayed. Either Gosper is lying himself to cover his own culpability in this scandal or he has spent decades in one of the world’s most corrupt organisations and not worked out exactly what sort of people he is dealing with. Either way, the bloke has no credibility and only resignation from the IOC will demonstrate that he has any principles.
Given the extent to which the actual sportsmen and women — below the media and broadcasters in the absurd Olympic “movement” foodchain — have already been sacrificed by the IOC, the media shouldn’t be surprised that they were the next to cop it in the neck. If the IOC is quite happy to countenance athletes keeling over due to exposure to Beijing’s Dickensian smog levels, the mere question of censorship wouldn’t have raised an eyebrow. Moreover, the IOC and the Chinese know the media all too well. The world’s broadcasters and major newspapers will comply with whatever outrageous restrictions are put in place by Beijing, because there’s too much money, too many ratings points, at stake. Principled media organisations would consider refusing to work under the censorious terms dictated by one the planet’s most brutal regimes.
In any event, this should put paid to the IOC’s pretensions to being some sort of geo-political player. For decades, it has claimed some sort of semi-mystical capacity to engender freedom and goodwill, chiefly by awarding the Olympics to non-democracies or countries emerging from authoritarian rule. Far from somehow opening up China to freedom and democracy, the arrival of the Olympics in Beijing has merely furnished the Chinese Government with the rationalise to crack down even more firmly on its media, dissidents, and even ordinary Chinese people desperate to drawn official attention to the systemic corruption that bedevils provincial life in that country. Those now languishing in Chinese gaols for daring to speak out are doubtless grateful to the IOC for all it has done for Chinese freedom.
But let’s not worry about that. The real issue is how our boys and girls will perform. Wasn’t it sad about Stephanie Rice and Eamon Sullivan … such a nice young couple. But I suppose you can’t be distracted if you want to “medal”.
I’m not a major fan of the olympics anyway, so that may cloud my judgement, but I’ve always felt that they have bugger-all to do with being an exercise in support of the administration of the host nation and are instead a prominent series of sporting events – roughly equivalent to the world championships – where the host city/nation is at best a bit of background scenery. JamesK is right to mention the 1936 games as an obvious example of an attempt to use the games as a propoganda tool, but I have always felt that example has been why most of the world’s population has largely ignored subsequent attempts to do the same ever since. I don’t think that the 1980 games were somehow a pro-communist story (despite US claims to the contrary), nor do I think the 84 or 96 games were somehow all about the US. I thought the Sydney games were arguably much more pro-Sydney than pro-Australia, but all my memories of all these olympics (and they’re pretty hazy when it comes to Moscow) are about sporting achievements and not the host regime. Yes the IOC has a long record of dodgy conduct, but its lack of purity on internet access in Beijing is hardly different to its delegates accepting backhanders in return for votes or its dealings with other dodgy regimes all over the place. You can’t be doing deals with all the world’s nations and expect to retain ideological purity. Anyone who expects Kevan Gosper to not have to tell all sorts of lies as he apologises for any number of dodgy actions on the part of the IOC or its member countries is just being naive.
Avery Brundage. is the one. The cost of a jade collection such as his would run into a hundred million, easily.
V.
Bernard: Ah ha, ah ha! Now you’re cooking on gas! I can’t imagine why anyone thought the Chinese would keep their word about an open press. They have never pretended to before. Also they regard the rest of the world as inferior to them; so why give them freedom of the press? Also, if Rupert Murdoch couldn’t ride the Chinese tiger, who on earth could?
The greater the hyperbole and cant issued by the IOC the greater the greed of the people concerned. There was an American head of the IOC who sank his takings into a world famous collection of jade. Temporarily his name escapes me. But his collection doesn’t. The regrettable Kevin Gosper is nowhere near this kind of ‘bentness’ shall I say?
Crikey, I’ve just clapped eyes on JamesK’s comment. Just a minute while I pick myself up off the ground, floor. OMG he’s in agreement. The only worse-from an information restricted view point-would have been North Korea. But of course thanks to Kimilsungism that country wouldn’t have the money to pay these greedy and corrupt officials. I try to avoid watching opening ceremonies. The sight of the officials, marching with the celebrants, and the fact they make up about 60% of the team has me wanting to throw up.
According to the Trots at Gruniad, basically only the blocks on Amnesty International and the BBC and a couple of other sites have been lifted. Nice media management by the IOC.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/aug/02/china.internet
right on again bernard, can’t believe that JamesK agrees with you and I agree with him! who would have thunk it! seriously tho, the olympics is nothing but a glitzy corporate globalised sporting event that is no longer about honour but corporate sponsorship as the worst of the worst transnational corps plaster their logos over everything in the name of the ‘olympic spirit’. not that the sport itself isn’t outstanding it’s just that in this world it’s time that athletes took a look at the real world and see how truly fuct many of the corporations who sponsor them are, not to mention the neo-fascist/communist state that is holding the games…