Why do countries want to host the Olympic Games?
Why do countries want to host the Olympic Games?
The Games are seen by many to be a huge waste of public money. London: originally estimated at a cost of £2.4bn, the budget had by 2007 ballooned to £9.3bn. Now that it looks likely to come in at just over £9.2bn, organisers are claiming that the Games are "on time and on budget" ? But, which budget surely not the original £2.4bn.
Rather than seem to P on this parade, my own view remains the same, the Olympics are not my cup of tea. I do understand that many enjoy the games and will have a ball. But most will have to watch all either on TV or at Live Sites - a permanent network of giant outdoor screens in public squares with a piece of dedicated space in at least 60 major cities and county towns. This is necessary as the modern Olympic Games are always hosted by a city - not really by a country.
The cost of building facilities etc. for the Olympics is huge and may not help the economy of a country at all. Much depends on how these Olympic facilities are used after the Games - the Olympic legacy.
Hopefully after the Games, four arenas, three 50m swimming pools and the water polo pools will be disassembled and rebuilt in other parts of the UK. All the sports equipment used will also be donated to UK sports clubs and charities.
I do wish all our athletes well and ask that they go for Gold, otherwise all would be even more of a waste. I have faith in team GB, just cannot be arsed sitting around watching the stuff. Five minutes on news at 10 is enough for me.
Staging a large international sporting event means different things for different host cities, in terms of the Olympics, for Barcelona the driving force was regeneration, for Sydney it was about putting itself on the map as a global destination, for Athens it was about redefining itself as a modern European city.
All this means to me is travel chaos and sitting on the M25 for longer.
I do admire our athletes and those that compete, but it is all meant to be amateur, so why does it have to cost so much ?
I do hold more time for the Paralympic Games, a unique element of Paralympic sports, intended to ensure fair competition. As each sport at the Paralympic Games requires different skills and competencies, the impact of impairment on the performance of the athletes varies. That’s why each sport has its own unique classification rules.
K.
I really am not anti the Olympics:
I really am not anti the Olympics:
Just anti farce:
Will roll with: Sited above the White Cliffs, the very front line of World War Two, the final embarkation point for many of those who gave their lives in World War One. The creation of the memorial will be a single great gesture detailing the names of the 1.7 million individuals who made the ultimate sacrifice in the two World Wars.
We still talk monies: but a worthwhile cost:
THE UNVEILING - 3RD SEPTEMBER 2008
Merchant mariners are a forgotten service of war-time, yet key to survival, for, without them vital supplies could not have been transported. Over 30,000 British merchant mariners lost their lives in World War II, and some 17,000 in the Great War.
Plans have recently been unveiled to create a new national war memorial in Dover. The proposed memorial would stand in Drop Redoubt, a disused Napoleonic Fort on Dover’s Western Heights.
It would include a series of free-standing stone walls listing all those from the UK and Commonwealth countries who died in the First and Second world wars - an incredible 1.7 million names, making it unique in this country and probably the world.
If successful, the plan is to open the memorial by 2014, the 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War.
The first Merchant Navy Day was held in 2000, on 3rd September. This was the anniversary of the torpedoing of the SS Athenia, mistaken by U-30 for an armoured cruiser, some eight hours after war had been declared against Germany in 1939.
On Merchant Navy Day 2005 Donald Hunter, retired Merchant Navy man who had served during the Second World War, proposed a Merchant Navy memorial in Dover. Three years and nearly £50,000 of fund-raising later, the new memorial, situated on Dover seafront, was unveiled.
Plans have recently been unveiled to create a new national war memorial in Dover. The proposed memorial would stand in Drop Redoubt, a disused Napoleonic Fort on Dover’s Western Heights.
It would include a series of free-standing stone walls listing all those from the UK and Commonwealth countries who died in the First and Second world wars - an incredible 1.7 million names, making it unique in this country and probably the world.
If successful, the plan is to open the memorial by 2014, the 100th anniversary of the start of the First World War.
LINK: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-kent-18438245
LINK 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xiInhoAmFfE