A timely op-ed in the New York Times on what the Olympic games are about, beyond medals and athletic prowess: corporate profit, security build-up and gentrification.We have added pictures,some hyper-links and background info.
Olympian Arrogance
By JULES BOYKOFF and ALAN TOMLINSON
Published: July 4, 2012
WHILE Europe roils in economic turmoil, London is preparing for a lavish jamboree of international good will: in a few weeks, the city will host the 2012 Summer Olympics.
But behind the spectacle of athletic prowess and global harmony, brass-knuckle politics and brute economics reign. At this nexus sits the International Olympic Committee, which promotes the games and decides where they will be held. Though the I.O.C. has been periodically tarnished by scandal — usually involving the bribing and illegitimate wooing of delegates — those embarrassments divert us from a deeper problem: the organization is elitist, domineering and crassly commercial at its core.
But behind the spectacle of athletic prowess and global harmony, brass-knuckle politics and brute economics reign. At this nexus sits the International Olympic Committee, which promotes the games and decides where they will be held. Though the I.O.C. has been periodically tarnished by scandal — usually involving the bribing and illegitimate wooing of delegates — those embarrassments divert us from a deeper problem: the organization is elitist, domineering and crassly commercial at its core.
The
I.O.C., which champions itself as a democratic “catalyst for
collaboration between all parties of the Olympic family,” is nonetheless
run by a privileged sliver of the global 1 percent.This has always
been the case: when Baron Pierre de Coubertin revived the Olympics in
the 1890s, he assembled a hodgepodge of princes, barons, counts and
lords to coordinate the games. Eventually the I.O.C. opened its hallowed
halls to wealthy business leaders and former Olympians. Not until 1981
were women allowed in.
Even today, royalty make up a disproportionate share of the body; among the 105 I.O.C. members
are the likes of Princess Nora of Liechtenstein, Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Prince Nawaf Faisal Fahd Abdulaziz of Saudi Arabia. The
United States has only three representatives, two of them former Olympic
athletes.
Then there are the excessive demands that the I.O.C. makes on host
cities. For instance, the host cities have had to change their laws to
comply with the Olympic Charter,
which states that “no kind of demonstration or political, religious or
racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other
areas.” When Vancouver, British Columbia, hosted the Winter Games in 2010, the city passed a bylaw that outlawed signs and banners that did
not “celebrate” the Olympics. Placards that criticized the Olympics were
forbidden, and the law even empowered Canadian authorities to remove
such signs from private property.
The I.O.C. also makes host cities police Olympics-related intellectual property rights. So Parliament adopted the London Olympic Games and Paralympic Games Act of 2006, which defines as a trademark infringement the commercial use of words like “games,” “2012” and “London” in proximity.
Such monomaniacal brand micromanagement points to another problem: the
I.O.C. has turned the Olympics into a commercial bonanza. In London,
more than 250 miles of V.I.P. traffic lanes are reserved not just for
athletes and I.O.C. luminaries but also for corporate sponsors. Even the
signature torch relay has been commercialized: the I.O.C. and its
corporate partners snapped up 10 percent of the torchbearer slots for
I.O.C. stakeholders and members of the commercial sponsors’ information
technology and marketing staffs. Michael R. Payne, a former marketing
director for the committee, has called the Olympics “the world’s longest
commercial.”
Most worrisome, perhaps, is that the I.O.C. creates perverse incentives
for security officials in host cities to overspend and to militarize public space. The I.O.C. tends to look kindly on bids that assure
security, and host cities too often use the games as a
once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to stock police warehouses with the best
weapons money can buy.
Visitors to London, where the games are scheduled to run from July 27 to
Aug. 12, would be forgiven for thinking they had dropped in on a
military hardware convention. Helicopters, fighter jets and
bomb-disposal units will be at the ready. About 13,500 British military
personnel will be on patrol — 4,000 more than are currently serving in
Afghanistan. Security officials have acquired Starstreak and Rapier
surface-to-air missiles. Even the Olympic mascots look like two-legged surveillance cameras.
Let us be clear: the concern about ensuring a terror-free Olympics is
tragically warranted. In 1972, members of the Palestinian militant group
Black September killed 11 Israeli athletes and coaches at the Olympics in Munich — after which the I.O.C. president notoriously insisted that
“the games must go on” — and in 1996, a bomb at the Atlanta Olympics
killed a spectator and injured more than 100 other people. Yet there is
such a thing as excess — and surveillance and weaponry are not a
panacea.
A refrence to missile launcher next to Olympic venues by Bansky Source Daily Mirror |
Security measures can also be counterproductive: London residents who
learned that the Ministry of Defense was attaching missile launchers to
the roofs of their apartment buildings can’t be blamed for wondering if
they’ve unwillingly become a prime target for terrorists. And,
symbolically, at a certain point it gets hard to square the image of the
militarized state with the Olympic ideals of peace and understanding.
What can be done? The I.O.C. has acknowledged that the escalating scale
of the games — “gigantism” — is a real issue. Competitions drenched in
privilege, like the equestrian events, should be ditched (with apologies
to Ann Romney’s horse Rafalca, who will be competing in dressage in
London). Pseudo-historical events like Greco-Roman wrestling, concocted
in the 19th century, could also go. Events with high start-up costs
could be swapped for those requiring fewer resources. Why not bring back
tug-of-war (a hotly contested event in the early 20th century) and add
more running events, like trail running and cross-country?
Governance is another challenge. After the bribery scandal surrounding
the selection of Salt Lake City to host the 2002 Winter Olympics, and
under pressure from Congress, the I.O.C. created an ethics commission to
monitor the bid process — but it reports to the I.O.C.’s executive
board, which still has the final say.
Other measures worth considering are to streamline committee membership
and to provide greater representation for the international sports
federations that administer athletic competitions — though either
approach would continue to pose accountability problems.
In these bleak economic times, the world could use a little athletic
transcendence. Sadly, the arrogance and aloofness of the organization
behind the spectacle are all too ordinary.
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