Motoring1 min ago
'Has England ever been so foul with patriotism?'
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http:// www.dai lymail. ...mes- Royal-F amily.h tml
Many on this site in the past have slated patriotism and the Royal Family and have also connected the flying of flags with the BNP or the EDL etc.
Do they now agree with Morrissey regarding the show of patriotism at the Olympics?
Many on this site in the past have slated patriotism and the Royal Family and have also connected the flying of flags with the BNP or the EDL etc.
Do they now agree with Morrissey regarding the show of patriotism at the Olympics?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I find it hard to believe that anyone takes what that muppet says seriously. I don't see anything wrong with people supporting their team, whoever that is. And from what I've been seeing/reading, everyone is talking about the atmosphere being awesome at the games so I hardly think it's a problem.
I'm not actually much of a royalist myself, and I've not really noticed that they're hijacking anything. I saw William, Harry and I think Kate watching something and going mental when Britain won. I thought it was very touching actually.
I'm not actually much of a royalist myself, and I've not really noticed that they're hijacking anything. I saw William, Harry and I think Kate watching something and going mental when Britain won. I thought it was very touching actually.
it seems to me that in the past when people have seen Olympics staged in other countries they've been shocked by the jingoiism of the local commentators and compared them with the more restrained and even-handed coverage they'd get in Britain. This no longer appears a viable argument. Whether it's a good thing, who can say.
I don't watch much TV and haven't been watching the Olympics but it is still a nice feeling that 'Team GB' is doing so well.
People are obviously enjoying watching the sport and the people taking part have worked towards this even for a long time.
Just noticed the heading - I'm in Scotland, does that mean we aren't foul?
People are obviously enjoying watching the sport and the people taking part have worked towards this even for a long time.
Just noticed the heading - I'm in Scotland, does that mean we aren't foul?
I'd agree that patriotism is a rather dubious virtue - it's essentially a call to mindless tribalism
"my country right or wrong"
And there is a degree of "Bread and circuses" about the Olympics diverting attention from the apalling economic mess that's being made of the country.
Yes I can see where he's coming from, I think the 1939 comparison is overstating it because there none of the violence or racism that underlay Nazi Germany.
I'd agree with the sentiment but not with the degree to which he's expressed it.
Always a shame when someone ruins a good point by overstating the case - we see it on here all the time
"my country right or wrong"
And there is a degree of "Bread and circuses" about the Olympics diverting attention from the apalling economic mess that's being made of the country.
Yes I can see where he's coming from, I think the 1939 comparison is overstating it because there none of the violence or racism that underlay Nazi Germany.
I'd agree with the sentiment but not with the degree to which he's expressed it.
Always a shame when someone ruins a good point by overstating the case - we see it on here all the time
Morrissey isn't comparing it to genocide - he's comparing it to propaganda.
I don't like the way he has phrased his point (I don't like it when anyone harks back to 1939 for any reason with a few notable exceptions - it's the standard cheap-shot and is only really valid in a few contemporary topics), but I do have some sympathy with it. While I did during my teens, patriotism isn't something I really have any time for any more, and I am a little suspicious of the rather convenient way national fervour is being drummed up, which he's also right to point out is a fairly classic strategy of power in modern history.
As for the olympics generally - I haven't been watching as it doesn't really interest me. But I respect the dedication and skill the various sportsmen display. But they're not winning it for me, and I dislike the idea that they are. They are winning it through and for their own skill and resolve, and they are examples of just what can be achieved with the right levels of willpower. That's beautiful enough - they don't need to have done it for my imagined community or on my behalf somehow.
I don't like the way he has phrased his point (I don't like it when anyone harks back to 1939 for any reason with a few notable exceptions - it's the standard cheap-shot and is only really valid in a few contemporary topics), but I do have some sympathy with it. While I did during my teens, patriotism isn't something I really have any time for any more, and I am a little suspicious of the rather convenient way national fervour is being drummed up, which he's also right to point out is a fairly classic strategy of power in modern history.
As for the olympics generally - I haven't been watching as it doesn't really interest me. But I respect the dedication and skill the various sportsmen display. But they're not winning it for me, and I dislike the idea that they are. They are winning it through and for their own skill and resolve, and they are examples of just what can be achieved with the right levels of willpower. That's beautiful enough - they don't need to have done it for my imagined community or on my behalf somehow.
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