Tewder
Senior Member
I'm trying to wrap my head around the idea that just because other organizations are corrupt, that's no reason not to welcome the Olympics. You WANT to give money to a corrupt organization when you have the option to totally avoid it? You really believe that a corrupt organization will provide the "great things" you expect from the games?
No, the corrupt organization doesn't provide anything except the opportunity. It's what we do with the opportunity that counts. Again, what organizations aren't corrupt? Show me one that is objectively 'pure' and we'll talk!... and that includes most of the employers out there.
Something I find curious about this discussion (I don't mean you specifically) is the dogged unwillingness to look at the evidence from past host cities. I mean, beyond the mainstream superficial accounts. Like actually reading the many books and studies that have analyzed the impact of the Games in some depth. People really don't want to do that. They'll read reviews before committing 2 hours to a movie, but won't spend a few hours doing research before allowing their government to commit them to paying through the nose for decades for one big event.
Why such reluctance? What is that about?
We can all cherry-pick examples to suit our arguments. We can focus on the disaster of Athens or the successes of Seoul and Barcelona, for example. It's further complicated by the fact that different cities may achieve different objectives and legacies in hosting an olympics, objectives which have ancillary benefits that go beyond the absolute bottom line paid. When you're looking at the 'evidence' you have to consider all these things.
As I alluded to in an earlier post I don't think it is constructive to talk about Athens or cities that are completely unlike Toronto. Instead let's look at the cities that did it right to see how Toronto could do it even better... and not to say that we shouldn't look at the failures closely, which would be foolish of course.