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Olympics Serve To Promote Nationalism

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  • Olympics Serve To Promote Nationalism

    OLYMPICS SERVE TO PROMOTE NATIONALISM
    Nickolas Conrad

    The Daily Evergreen
    http://www.dailyevergreen.com/story/2587 5
    Aug 24 2008
    WA

    The United States is not the best country in the world. The 2008
    Olympics should be making this quite evident now that China has
    pulled ahead in the medal race. I am sure that coming in second is
    unacceptable to all the flag-waving Americans who take pride in our
    country's domination of other nations in any trivial way.

    It is important to keep a perspective on what a national, physically
    competitive enterprise entails. The Olympics is a summation of
    human physical achievement divided by national borders. It is
    entertainment. Every four years we congratulate ourselves on how
    far we can throw a spear, toss a disc or swim segmented lanes of pool
    water. It does not bring the world together to create peace or harmony;
    rather, the Olympics is used as a showcase for political egotism.

    As far as bringing greater harmony and collaboration, the 1936
    Olympics, held in Berlin, Germany by the Nazi Party, should serve as
    an example. The Nazis held and won the 1936 Olympics; the U.S. took
    a somewhat distant second. The Nazis flaunted their racial theories
    to other nations and led us into the conflagration of World War
    II. Sports did not create greater harmony. If anything, the Olympics
    made the situation worse.

    Sports are a cathartic expression of our aggressive natures that
    revel in violence and domination. Sports do not bring people to the
    negotiation table. Russia is not pulling out of Georgia any faster
    because they feel any respect for American athletes.

    When I watch the Olympics, I see a contest that brings out blind
    ethnocentric patriotism. Everyone becomes uncritical and gives their
    undying devotion to their country's honor. This patriotism causes us
    to wish for our opponents' utter humiliation. All I see is people
    waving their flags, complimenting themselves and denigrating their
    competitors.

    The Olympics is an embodiment of the 19th century notion of nationalism
    based on the ethnic, geographic and linguistic heritage of different
    people. Having studied the political history of the 19th and 20th
    century, I am extremely suspicious of naive nationalism. Most of
    the wars of the 20th century can be attributed to nationalistic
    fervor. The genocide of the Armenians by the Turks, the World Wars
    and wars of resistance and liberation are all results of violent
    nationalistic fervor.

    Let us take a moment and put aside our patriotic self-love and reflect
    on China's lead in the Olympics to remind ourselves the U.S. is not
    the greatest country in the world. Dominating others through physical
    competition, economic arrangements or military does not qualify any
    nation as the greatest.

    We are taught as children to pledge our allegiance to the flag. As
    we grow up, we fill our time watching Hollywood films or events such
    as the Olympics that are blindly patriotic and one-sided. Since the
    U.S.' establishment in 1776, it took us 89 years to end slavery and
    189 years to make equality a reality in law. It took us 144 years
    to give women the right to vote. To expand the U.S. territories,
    wars of aggression were fought against American Indians, the British,
    Spanish, Mexican and Filipinos. We dropped two atomic bombs on Japanese
    civilians, indiscriminately killing two entire cities of men, women
    and children.

    I appreciate America and all the opportunities it has provided
    me, yet I will not let the media brainwash me into unquestioning
    patriotism. We have to question even the most sacred icons of our
    identities to truly see ourselves for who we are.
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