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Graffito a San Paolo del Brasile per i mondiali di calcio in arrivo. Sintesi perfetta. (Original Post) kpete May 2014 OP
"Let them eat soccer balls!" I love it! Glorfindel May 2014 #1
K & R. n/t FSogol May 2014 #2
I love football (soccer). I really do tkmorris May 2014 #3
There used to be plenty of support for it muriel_volestrangler May 2014 #4

tkmorris

(11,138 posts)
3. I love football (soccer). I really do
Wed May 21, 2014, 10:53 AM
May 2014

But there is something really wrong here. Brazil is bankrupting itself in a misguided effort to... I don't even know what. What do they gain from this? Raise their profile internationally? Is it a national pride thing? I don't know but it is embarrassing that with all the social problems they have, their attempts to ready themselves for the World Cup have made things even worse, while draining any funds that may have gone towards fixing those issues.

They are hosting the Summer Olympics in 2016 as well, and by all reports those preparations are if anything going even worse than this year's World Cup is.

muriel_volestrangler

(101,321 posts)
4. There used to be plenty of support for it
Wed May 21, 2014, 11:36 AM
May 2014
In 2008 a poll by the Datafolha Agency in the widely respected Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper showed 79% support for the World Cup in Brazil. By April of this year another poll by the same agency showed this had fallen to 48%. Many people are more reluctant to associate themselves with a competition that has become a public relations disaster.

The anti-World Cup protests will not go away because there is plenty to protest about. There is the poor organisation - starting with the absurd delay in naming the host cities and the insistence on 12 when Fifa would have been happy with eight, while for years there was no government representation on the local organising committee - a bizarre flaw in a tournament that has implications for public spending. And many people believe that officials have taken the support of the people for granted and made empty promises.

Hosting the competition has cost the country more than it should, and in return is giving back less than it should. The cost of the stadiums is now in the region of £2.4bn, three times more than the figure quoted in 2007. Four of the stadiums - in Manaus, Cuiaiba, Brasilia and Natal - would seem to have little prospect of long-term viability, meaning that there was no chance of private funding being attracted to build them.
...
The great hope of the authorities is that the power of the event will work its magic. This is not just a forlorn desire. The atmosphere in the country through June and July is sure to be very special; over half a million visitors from all over the planet will be traipsing across the country, giving Brazil an unusual cosmopolitan air, and with over 60% of the tickets being snapped up by Brazilians, there is clearly considerable local enthusiasm for the event also, however well hidden.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/27476602

If it had cost only £800 million, then half a million visitors would have gone a fair way to bringing in the money, and they'd have ended up with updated stadia.
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