"If only we still owned all those other countries, oh how we would make 
them pay!"

Philip
biketinker.com


On Sunday, August 12, 2012 12:50:19 PM UTC-7, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2P86C-1x3o 
>
> Conservative loonie (not a loonie because he is conservative; he's 
> just a loonie and he is conservative), long-time dedicated 
> transportation cyclist, and brother-to-Christopher, Peter Hitchens, 
> writing for the raggish Mail, sez: 
>
> "If you believe that Olympic glory makes a nation great, just remember the 
> USSR 
> This is Peter Hitchens’ Mail on Sunday column 
>
> It seems that you can now be arrested for not smiling when an Olympic 
> event is taking place. So I had better watch out in case I am wrestled 
> to the ground and carted off by some Compulsory Happiness snatch 
> squad. 
>
> For I have not been smiling nearly enough. I have watched two or three 
> races on the TV. 
>
> There is still something thrilling in a raw contest among men and 
> women stretched to the uttermost, in which there can be only one 
> winner. 
>
> It is refreshingly unlike modern Britain, where the very idea that 
> there must be losers for there to be winners is banned from most 
> schools, and denied by our political leaders. 
>
> But I can summon up little interest in all the other alleged sports, 
> dancing animals, underwater basketball, bikini display or whatever 
> they are. As a lifelong cyclist, I find myself startlingly unmoved by 
> Olympic cycling. 
>
> It is too technological, too dependent on machines and airlocks. 
>
> The riders look like aliens in their special outfits. 
>
> But good luck to you if you have enjoyed it. I am happy for you, 
> provided I’m allowed to differ from you. The trouble is, I’m not sure 
> I am. 
>
> From the moment these Olympics started, there’s been a strong smell of 
> New Labour totalitarianism. 
>
> Those who have dared to say they didn’t like the Opening Ceremony have 
> been lectured and made to feel isolated. 
>
> The BBC even transmitted an astonishing personal attack on me in which 
> I was misrepresented (they have since apologised, an event as rare as 
> a Lottery win, but alas the apology is nothing like good enough). 
>
> Now someone called Armando Iannucci, who is famous for something, has 
> called me a ‘scribbling cynic’ and proclaimed that I and those like me 
> ‘took a hell of a beating’. 
>
> I think this is because the British team has won a lot of medals, and 
> the Opening Ceremony has been much praised. 
>
> I can’t see why an Olympic opening ceremony should have any politics 
> in it at all. But remember how deeply the Blairite Cosa Nostra was 
> involved in securing the Olympics for London at all costs, and how 
> their heirs, the Cameron Tories, have taken up the baton. 
>
> Why? I think the pitiful failure of the Millennium Dome rankled badly 
> with the Blairites. They were and are revolutionaries. They had long 
> hoped to use the new century to proclaim Year One of their nasty, 
> tatty, multicultural, anti-Christian New Britain. 
>
> Put simply, I think they wanted to undo the magic of the 1953 
> Coronation Ceremony, with modernist incantations and a censored, 
> reordered version of our national history. 
>
> The Olympics were a second chance, in which a normal love of sport 
> could be converted into an anti-conservative wave of feeling. 
>
> And behold, they have done it. I don’t begrudge the winners their joy, 
> or the spectators their delight. 
>
> But do Olympic medals make a nation great? Was the USSR a great nation 
> because it won lots of them? Is Jamaica a stable and happy society 
> because Usain Bolt is a great athlete? 
> Would you rather have Australia’s thriving economy, or Britain’s medal 
> tally? And by the way, have Prince William and his wife forgotten that 
> they are future monarchs of Australia? 
>
> In a free country, there is no obvious connection between sporting 
> achievement and national standing. The truth is that we have used 
> scarce money to hire coaches, buy equipment and subsidise athletes in 
> sports where competition is weak. 
>
> When all this is over, we will still be broke, disorderly, badly 
> educated and gravely troubled by the greatest wave of mass immigration 
> in our history. I cannot see why I should smile about that." 
>
> -- 
> "When in Rome, do as they done in Milledgeville." 
>
> Flannery O'Connor 
>
> ------------------------- 
> Patrick Moore, Albuquerque, NM, USA 
> For professional resumes, contact Patrick Moore, ACRW 
> http://resumespecialties.com/index.html 
> ------------------------- 
>

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