I love the Olympics. No one is more excited than me (except maybe Ian Thorpe and his new best friend Henry Kissinger) about two weeks of physical endurance and deep hatred based on nationality and racial stereotyping.However, there is time between 2:00 and 6:00am when there are no live events on, to reflect on what sport does to us. As we commence this fortnight of hysteria, we can afford to ask: what are we allowing ourselves to get away with in the name of sport?
* Featured pic found there also.
Nicole Kidman in The West on Saturday:
"I want to wish every one of our wonderful Australian Olympic team the very best of luck over the next two weeks," the Hollywood star told the Seven Network."They've all put in so much hard work ... so I just want to say we as Australians know you are going to give it your best shot - go for it, try to enjoy every moment as well."
Simon Barnes blogging from Beijing for
The Times online:The worst decision sport ever made was to start testing for drugs. Once they began to catch the cheats, all hell broke out and we began to lose the faith. In particular, we began to lose faith in the core Olympic sports of athletics and swimming. Now the world is full of people declaring that they don't care who wins what at the Olympic Games, because “they're all on something”.
Kevin Rudd quoted in
The Age yesterday:"As someone who's looked at the history of human rights in China, it's always been two steps forward, one step back," Mr Rudd said when asked if China had fulfilled its promise, made in 2001 when it was awarded the 2008 Games, to improve human rights.
The Epoch Times looking back at the week:
"The smog actually helps us, the more the better for an old guy like me, I can see those little orange discs a lot better in the sky." - Australian shooter Russell Mark takes a lighter look at the pollution problem plaguing Beijing ahead of the Olympic Games.
Headline in the Telegraph.co.uk on Saturday:
Beijing Olympics: The ultimate business networking opportunity
From Black and White Cat in a post called
God the Father, God the Son and God the Olympic Spirit:.... in Beijing, hundreds of people on drugs will run around in circles and throw things. I’ve heard various people here, enthused with the passion of the sacred flame, saying that this is the most important thing that has ever happened in China - displaying either a disturbing lack of knowledge of Chinese history or a very strange interpretation of it.
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