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  • 2008 Beijing Olympics Thread

    If you don't post in this thread you're a commie.

    And how nice of the Russians to invade Georgia on the starting date of the Olympics. Good people they are.
    "I've got one word for you- Dallas, Texas, Super Bowl"- Jermichael Finley

  • #2



    Where Once He Was Lost, Now He Is Found

    By Thomas Boswell
    Friday, August 8, 2008; E01

    BEIJING

    For seven years, China has dreamed of orchestrating every detail, athletic and political, of its glorious Opening Ceremonies to the Olympics. Now, one lean 1,500-meter runner from the United States, chosen by his teammates in an act of open defiance, may steal the show. Lopez Lomong, one of the Sudanese "Lost Boys" and a member of the anti-genocide group Team Darfur, has been chosen by his 595 U.S. Olympic teammates to carry our flag on Friday. What, we couldn't find a Tibetan monk on the team?

    What a coincidence. Just hours before U.S. team captains met to decide on the flag carrier, Chinese officials rescinded the visa of Joey Cheek, a speedskating gold medalist who carried the U.S. flag at the Closing Ceremonies at the 2006 Winter Games and later co-founded Team Darfur. After that slap at Cheek, U.S. athletes here had almost nothing to say on the topic. One even referred to the subject as "the question they warned us about."

    Perhaps they didn't answer individually. But the entire U.S. team gave its answer -- as a group and in capital letters -- with Lomong's selection. You jerk Cheek's visa. We put Lomong in your face. And do it proudly.

    You have to hand it to the Chinese Communist Party: They certainly know how to muzzle Americans. Cheek, a Princeton grad, might have held a seminar. Four billion people around the world will see Lomong carrying our flag.

    Far more than that, untold millions of people, in the next few days, will hear Lomong's life story, in his own words. In a half-hour monologue here on Friday, just 10 hours before he was to carry the flag, Lomong told a tale of grief, endurance, redemption and almost unimaginable hardship that captures in human terms every aspect of the Darfur tragedy. And without Lomong saying a single "controversial" political word, he highlighted China's culpability by cynically supporting the Sudanese regime as partner in the vast oil company PetroChina.

    When U.S. Olympic Committee Chairman Peter Ueberroth was asked if the selection of Lomong was an expression by U.S. athletes about their views on China's human rights abuses, Ueberroth said: "The athletes can answer that better themselves. But either way, it's fine. Either way it's good. Lopez earned the right to carry the flag. You [media] folks can go with it. We'll get out of your way."

    Let's get going. During a Sunday morning Mass 17 years ago, the 6-year-old Lomong, along with about 100 other children, was taken at gunpoint from his parents, driven away blindfolded in a truck and dumped in a cramped, windowless, one-room prison full of boys. There, they were fed millet full of barely visible sand, which prevented proper digestion, and, within days, gradually led to the death of boy after boy.

    "They would go to sleep and never stand up again. 'Tomorrow will be my day,' " Lomong said. "But I had three angels." They were slightly older boys who told him to eat just enough of the death gruel to stay alive, but not enough to kill himself. After three weeks, the older trio discovered a hole in a fence. At midnight, crawling while guards talked, stopping when they fell silent, then crawling until they were outside the compound, the four boys began to run. "That is where my race started," Lomong said.

    Despite one boy holding each of his hands as they fled, Lomong nonetheless battered his legs on so many trees and thorns "that's why they still look like such a mess . . . We ran for three days and nights. They would hide me in a cave while two of them went to get water. They would fetch some back for me in a big leaf."

    When the four boys fell asleep at night, they made sure to keep their bodies pointed in the same direction that they had been running "so that we did not run back in the wrong direction toward the guards or run in circles," Lomong said. Finally, they were arrested at the Kenyan border -- penniless, unable to speak the local Swahili -- and taken to a refugee camp.

    For the next 10 years.

    There, thanks to the United Nations, a group of 10 boys were able to eat one meal a day. "You eat late at night so it will carry you until the next night," Lomong said. "In the day, you play soccer or run to keep your mind off the hunger. . . . Still, some Kenyans were not happy with us because we had more food than they did.

    "I thought my family was dead, but in the camp I became happy again."

    Twice a year, at Christmas and Easter, the 10 boys got one chicken. They mixed it with salt and water to make weak chicken soup and treasured every tiny morsel of actual chicken, their only meat of the year.

    In 2001, word arrived that the United States wanted to take 3,500 of these refugee "Lost Boys" to the United States to place with foster families. "But you had to write your life story to see who would go," Lomong said. "I just decided to say, 'This is me.' I put everything on a piece of paper."

    After three weeks, "They said, 'Congratulations.' "

    The rest was an incomprehensible swirl. An airplane, a family (Robert and Barbara Rogers) in Upstate New York and the sight of unfathomable cars, roads and cities. "I had to learn everything, like how to shower. [Is it] hot or cold? No, put it in the middle."

    Straight from the airport, the Rogers took Lomong to McDonald's. Yeah, yeah, the Olympic sponsor. And what did he order? Chicken.

    When he had eaten all he could, there was chicken left. "Throw it away," his new parents told him. "There's more at home." But he couldn't. "I remembered when a little piece of chicken was 'Merry Christmas to you.' So I took it home."

    Given opportunities that American teenagers take for granted, he embraced his chance with his whole soul. School was a blessing but also breathtaking to a 16-year-old who had always learned his letters by writing in the dirt.

    So, you ask, how on earth did Lomong get the idea of being an Olympian? Once in Kenya, he was given five shillings for watering cows. It was his only money but he never spent it, keeping it for the right moment. He heard others talking about the 2000 Olympics in Sydney and how, on the only TV set in the area, five miles away, they might watch it. So, Lomong and friends walked five miles to the black-and-white TV only to find out that, for each event you watched, you had to pay -- five shillings.

    That day, Lopez Lomong saw sprinter Michael Johnson run and win, stand on the podium in a U.S. uniform and cry as his anthem was played. "I want to run as fast as that guy," Lomong says he thought. "And I want to wear that same uniform. I was so determined. I knew I could run. Running is what we do all our lives. It is part of our transportation."

    On July 6, 2007, Lomong became an U.S. citizen. On July 6, 2008, he made the U.S. Olympic team. "It is what we call, 'Dream makes history,' " Lomong said.

    Once he gained citizenship, Lomong returned to his native land and was reunited with his parents who had, long ago, assumed he was dead, held a funeral and buried what remnants, like a child's beads, that he had left behind. Last December, Lomong participated in a burial in reverse as his plot was unearthed and blessed. "They revive me back," he said with a grin. "I am alive again."

    In his Sudanese village where war and genocide, disappearing families and starvation have seemed an unending fate, Lomong told everyone never to give up, that someone they believed dead "may be out there somewhere." For his parents, he bought a TV and told them: "You can watch me in the '08 Olympics. I didn't know I would make the team."

    Then his sheepish, gap-toothed expressing broke into a wide-eyed smile: "But I did."

    Not long ago, Lomong told a half-dozen track teammates, "I would like to be the one carrying the flag." As a member of Team Darfur, he knew it would spread information about the misery in Sudan and China's role as economic facilitator of the ruling regime.

    "My [track] teammates spread the word."

    When Cheek was denied his visa, the idea of Lomong carrying the flag had already been making the rounds among U.S. athletes. We'll no doubt learn the details of his election eventually. For now, nobody is giving details for fear of politicizing the Olympics even more. And Lomong, wisely, only says he wants to inspire other children, including those with challenges to overcome in China, while being a "good ambassador" for the United States.

    "It will be great tonight," Lomong said. "I can't wait."

    All across Beijing, pollution hung so low that you could hardly see from one venue to another across the street. Yet there will be a bright light in the Bird's Nest soon.

    The Chinese may light their Olympic flame wherever they like. Lopez Lomong will be the night's truest beacon.

    "I can't wait," he said, "to be the first one out."
    C.H.U.D.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: 2008 Beijing Olympics Thread

      Originally posted by BallHawk
      If you don't post in this thread you're a commie.

      And how nice of the Russians to invade Georgia on the starting date of the Olympics. Good people they are.
      War is an Olympic tradition.
      C.H.U.D.

      Comment


      • #4
        Great story, Freak Out.

        Comment


        • #5
          Gosh, when does the synchronized swimming competition begin? Harlan gets excited when they all do the Dog Paddle in unison.

          Comment


          • #6
            Anybody else been watching the opening ceremony? The beginning with the drums and fireworks was very cool, but the history aspect that they tried to be creative with I found a bit dull.

            I always forget how long the Parade of Nations is. Took over two hours.

            Nice story about the kid from the earthquake. Feel-good.

            You gotta feel happy for the people of China over tonight. The media really tries to hype it, but from talking to friends that have recently been to China they really are so pumped for the games.
            "I've got one word for you- Dallas, Texas, Super Bowl"- Jermichael Finley

            Comment


            • #7
              When does the women's beach volleyball start?
              I can't run no more
              With that lawless crowd
              While the killers in high places
              Say their prayers out loud
              But they've summoned, they've summoned up
              A thundercloud
              They're going to hear from me - Leonard Cohen

              Comment


              • #8
                China has evolved from hardcore Communist enemy to being more capitalist than Communist, economically, and a moderately decent citizen in the world community.

                Thank you Ronald Reagan, both George Bushes, and the American military for making that transformation the only logical course for the formerly Red Chinese leadership to take.
                What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by texaspackerbacker
                  China has evolved from hardcore Communist enemy to being more capitalist than Communist, economically, and a moderately decent citizen in the world community.

                  Thank you Ronald Reagan, both George Bushes, and the American military for making that transformation the only logical course for the formerly Red Chinese leadership to take.
                  China has never been particularly expansionistic. They are just fuckers to Taiwan, Tibet, and most of their own people.

                  i see nothing encouraging in china. i wish they'd go back to being real commies - at least they weren't destroying the earth's atmosphere.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    The wacko environmentalist crap is overrated whether it's here or there.

                    I hope you're being sarcastic about wishing they were still more virulent Commies. Myself, I can do without the nuclear war that might be necessitated by having an aggressive enemy with four times our population.
                    What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      they've combined the worst parts of communism with the worst parts of capitalism .

                      what is there to cheer about china? that is a nightmare country. horrible. most of their population has not shared in the economic expansion. State control like out of a science fiction novel.

                      you sniff at the ecological damage they are doing, but that is ignorant. The air quality in our country is going to shit because of all the pollution carried across the upper atmosphere.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Harlan Huckleby
                        they've combined the worst parts of communism with the worst parts of capitalism .

                        what is there to cheer about china? that is a nightmare country. horrible. most of their population has not shared in the economic expansion. State control like out of a science fiction novel.

                        you sniff at the ecological damage they are doing, but that is ignorant. The air quality in our country is going to shit because of all the pollution carried across the upper atmosphere.
                        You're buying into the worst of liberal propaganda--a long with just a dab of conservative propaganda too, Harlan.

                        I say again, the environmentalist idiocy is overrated there and non-existent here. And from all indications I have seen, the prosperity from the conversion to capitalism--something ethnic Chinese have thrived on for several millenia, has indeed, trickled down very well to all levels of Chinese society. The freedom aspect may not be what it should be yet, but it's a night and day difference from a generation or two ago.

                        Don't be so negative. The Chinese mprovement both in prosperity and in freedom are good for Americans in a lot of ways.
                        What could be more GOOD and NORMAL and AMERICAN than Packer Football?

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Somebody just threw a drum into the water in the finals of the women's 200 fly. WTF?
                          "I've got one word for you- Dallas, Texas, Super Bowl"- Jermichael Finley

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Supposedly, the Olympics has a new rule that female gymnasts must be at least 16 years old.

                            When I saw some of those Chinese girls, they did not look anywhere near 16. Some of them looked like they had not even reached puberty with flat chests and the hips of a 9 year old.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by oregonpackfan
                              When I saw some of those Chinese girls, they did not look anywhere near 16. Some of them looked like they had not even reached puberty with flat chests and the hips of a 9 year old.
                              Kiera Knightley does gymnastics?
                              "I've got one word for you- Dallas, Texas, Super Bowl"- Jermichael Finley

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