A Critical History of the Olympics
http://kielarowski.net/2014/02/08/a-critical-history-of-the-olympics/
Well worth the time to read.
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A Critical History of the Olympics
Beyond Sochi
by PAUL GOTTINGER
The 2014 Winter Olympics are set to open on February 7 in Sochi, Russia. In the lead up to this Olympics there has been no shortage of criticism in the U.S. media for Russias human rights abuses in Chechnya and Dagestan, the countrys crackdown on civil society, and most visibly Russias recent laws criminalizing gays and lesbians.
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The Olympics serve the interests of the global wealthy in a number of important ways. To better understand the Olympics one should understand the organization behind the Olympics and take a critical look at some of the recent impacts the games have had on host cities.
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The cost of hosting the Olympic games routinely runs over budget with no real way to determine the true cost. The total cost of the 2010 Vancouver Olympics is estimated to be 7 billion dollars, and analysis done last August shows Vancouver taxpayers are taking a 300 million dollar loss on just the Olympic village project alone. The estimates of the London Olympics cost are between £13 and £24 billion. This incredible price tag demonstrates how serious David Cameron really was about the age of austerity and his commitment to cut excess government spending.
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The Olympics sponsors (a whos who of criminal corporations) are given monopoly rights to vend (so much for Olympic competition), and in the true to the spirit of neoliberalism Londons Olympic bid even included tax haven status for Olympic sponsor corporations.
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Though the major media prefer to criticize the human rights record of the Olympic hosts only when they take place in Russia or China, there are significant problems with all Olympic games.
The policies of the IOC, like those of other transnational organizations (G8, IMF, ect.), can be resisted through the creation of a strong grassroots movement. A number of the recent Olympic host cities were home to many devoted activists working on anti-Olympic actions. But hopefully if more people are aware of the similarities between the IOC and the G8/IMF visions of a better world, they may be called to work for an actual better world, one which benefits all the inhabitants of a city, not just the wealthy.