Official Tokyo 2021 Olympics thread

MikelArteta

Moderator
Staff member
Supporter
Joined
Apr 30, 2012
Messages
248,594
Reputation
30,733
Daps
759,821
Reppin
Top 4
IOC needs to put the Olympics in Luanda

I actually think an african country hosting an olympics games would somewhat be good. Crooked governments would have to spend money on modern facilities and the influx of tourism dollars would be long lasting:yeshrug:
 

mykey

Superstar
Joined
Jan 3, 2017
Messages
2,985
Reputation
610
Daps
13,273
If we look at track only.. Kenya and Jamaica continue to punch above their weight.
3QqfmkK.jpg
 

dora_da_destroyer

Master Baker
Joined
May 1, 2012
Messages
64,976
Reputation
15,880
Daps
265,898
Reppin
Oakland
Y’all wildin in here. Of course the “I hate America so much I can’t even enjoy us winning at sports” crew comes through, but then the “we won the Olympics” crew also pops up when there is no winner

ahh man. I just enjoy the two weeks every 4 years that I decide to be “patriotic”
 
Last edited:

Professor Emeritus

Veteran
Poster of the Year
Supporter
Joined
Jan 5, 2015
Messages
51,330
Reputation
19,656
Daps
203,780
Reppin
the ether
I actually think an african country hosting an olympics games would somewhat be good. Crooked governments would have to spend money on modern facilities and the influx of tourism dollars would be long lasting:yeshrug:

Nah, olympics is always shyt for the populations that host them. Billions in public money goes into the hands of wealthy contractors, slums and low-income housing are destroyed to make space for stadiums that are hardly ever used again, police state is used to crack down on "undesireables".


Every Olympics since 1960 has exceeded its budget, and cities and host countries are on the hook for cost overruns—a loss rarely recouped by the eventual influx of revenue so enthusiastically touted by elected officials as the reason to place an Olympic bid in the first place.* One recent study found that since 2007, the games cost $12 billion apiece in sports-related costs alone—including event security, medical services, catering, and the construction of stadiums and Olympic Villages—not to mention up to several times as much for road and transit improvements, hotel expansion, and whatever else is needed to accommodate “the largest, highest-profile, and most expensive megaevent hosted by cities and nations.” If a Japanese government audit is correct, Tokyo 2020 will come out to $28 billion, almost four times its original budget of $7.5 billion.

Drained public coffers are nothing compared to the ways the Olympics ravage the communities they displace. Over two million people have been forced out of their homes to make way for hotels, stadiums, and Olympic Villages since 1988, one study found. In several instances, those sparkling new structures go unused after the games leave town—with venues constructed for Pyeongchang 2018 and Rio 2016 sitting empty where bustling communities used to be, a stone’s throw from new chain hotels with staggering vacancy rates. In many cities, ousting poor communities for upscale development projects is almost certainly an intended result of Olympic bids. Atlanta 1996 triggered the razing of public housing units occupied by some 4,000 people; Rio 2016 leveled favelas to erect luxury condos; and Los Angeles 2028 has already seen the obliteration of rent-stabilized units accelerate since the city won its Olympic bid, alongside the construction of new hotels scooping up nine-figure tax breaks—an issue central to the NOlympics LA coalition’s mobilization against the games.

Local residents fortunate enough not to be evicted for their city’s Olympics can expect a spike in policing, as money pours into “security” and ultimately erodes the social fabric of communities subjected to it: In The New York Times’ telling, Los Angeles 1984 ushered in “the largest and most expensive [security net] ever imposed on a peacetime enterprise.” As Dave Zirin argued in The Nation, that unprecedented militarization fueled gang sweeps and crackdowns in the city’s poor and historically Black neighborhoods, possibly accelerating conditions that led to the riots after the beating of Rodney King.

And for all that money and suffering, what do we get? A huge blowout every two years for cosmopolitan elites—right down to contractually demanded cocktail parties feting the IOC!—and some 15,000 athletes, more of whom will resort to crowdfunding their trip to the games than will ever end up on a Wheaties box. When the events aren’t held in the wake of five million deaths from a novel respiratory illness, a few million fans get to crowd into soon-to-be-idle stadiums that hundreds of workers may have died to build.

Abolish the Olympics
 
Top