Brazil... the Olympics... are we going to talk about it?

88m3

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Rio Games Conspiracy Watch: Did a Kayaker Get Capsized by a Runaway Sofa?
By Justin Peters

585266484-couch-rests-among-pollution-along-the-edge-of-guanabara.jpg.CROP.promo-xlarge2.jpg

A couch rests among pollution along the edge of Guanabara Bay, the venue for the Olympic sailing, on August 2, 2016 in Niteroi, Rio de Janeiro state, Brazil.

Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images

Did an Olympic kayaker capsize after his vessel hit a sofa in Rio de Janeiro’s Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon? Are the Olympic organizers covering up the incident to avoid embarrassment? And was the sofa in question actually more of a daybed? The #kayaksofa conspiracy theory is the biggest mystery of the young Rio Games, which have thus far been composed of equal parts athletic excellence, slapstick comedy, and garbage.

It began on August 5, when British journalist Paul Kelso posted an amusing update on Twitter:


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Paul Kelso

✔@pkelso

Hearing an Olympic kayaker may have capsized after hitting a submerged sofa. Story of day & possibly the week if true.#kayaksofa #Rio2016

4:22 PM - 5 Aug 2016


Though vague and uncorroborated—“I heard this from a guy”—the rumor caught on, and #kayaksofa became a popular hashtag, propelled by people who desperately wanted it to be true. Based on the reports leading into the games, a waterlogged sofa seemed like one of the less objectionable things an open-water athlete might expect to encounter. Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon and Guanabara Bay, which will host certain canoeing, kayaking, sailing, and swimming events, are notoriously filthy. The organizers of the Rio Games promised to clean the waters in advance of the Olympics, but as Martin Rogers of USA Today observed: “The bays, lagoons and marinas of Rio, just like those who insisted they would get cleaned up, are still full of (expletive).”

This assertion is quite literally true. A study commissioned by the Associated Pressfound that, as of August 1, “the waterways of Rio de Janeiro are as filthy as ever, contaminated with raw human sewage teeming with dangerous viruses and bacteria,” with the highest levels of human adenovirus near the starting and finish lines of the rowing races in Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon. In 2015, the surface of the lagoon was covered with more than 33 tons of dead fish.

A Guanabara Bay fisherman told the New York Timesthat he is accustomed to catching “television sets, dead dogs and the occasional dolphin killed by ingesting plastic bags.” In a different Times story about the benighted bay, an Olympic sailor who competes for Portugal remembered losing a sailing race in Guanabara Bay ‘”after a tarp that was floating beneath the surface caught his centerboard.” Two Olympic sailors from Germany told CNN they “hit a lot of plastic bags” during their training runs in the bay, and that their training partners “hit a chair.” A German Paralympian informed the CBC that on windless days the bay water “smells like a toilet” and “there is lots of garbage floating around ... whatever you can imagine, it’s there.”

Among that garbage: couches. A search of Getty Images turns up at least two at Guanabara Bay, the white-ish number at the top of this post and the patterned piece of furniture below.

464249175-discarded-couch-sits-along-the-polluted-waters-of.jpg.CROP.promo-xlarge2.jpg

A discarded couch sits along the polluted waters of Guanabara Bay outside Antnio Carlos Jobim International Airport on January 21, 2014 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Photo by Mario Tama/Getty Images

So, yeah, it’s very easy to imagine a couch or two bobbing along in the lagoons of Rio, and it’s easy to imagine a kayak being upturned by such a wayward sofa. But did it actually happen? On August 6, Times of London correspondent Martyn Ziegler chimed in with an update:


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Martyn Ziegler

✔@martynziegler

Breaking: Rio2016 to investigate reports of #kayaksofa. Spokesman Mario Andrada says first he's heard of it @pkelso

10:34 AM - 6 Aug 2016


Reporter Dan King soon had an update of his own:

6 Aug
Martyn Ziegler

✔@martynziegler

Breaking: Rio2016 to investigate reports of #kayaksofa. Spokesman Mario Andrada says first he's heard of it @pkelso


Follow
Dan King @DanKing_1974

@martynziegler @pkelso venue manager of canoe sprint site says nothing doing there either. Assume it's not on whitewater course #scaremonger

10:35 AM - 6 Aug 2016


At this point, it was still unclear whether the kayak actually hit the sofa, with some unnamed guy saying yes, the sprint canoe venue manager saying no, and the official Rio Games spokesman doing his best Admiral Stockdale impression. Whom to trust? Today, Rio Games officials tried to clear things up. As Bruce Arthur of the Toronto Starwrote this morning in a tweet:


Follow
Bruce Arthur

✔@bruce_arthur

The Rio organizing committee checked, and can't find evidence of the kayaker hitting the submerged sofa. This has been an Olympic update.

10:09 AM - 7 Aug 2016


So that’s your official verdict: No, a random kayaker did not hit a random sofa while practicing in the incredibly filthy Olympic lagoon. As of this writing, the lagoon remains incredibly filthy.

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hashmander

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this was suppose to be in chicago brehs, obama's going out party. but nah the BRICS were apparently the future so they had to get all the events.
 

88m3

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RIO 2016

"Medals over morals mentality" just got Russia kicked out of the Paralympics

By Tess Owen

August 7, 2016 | 1:05 pm
The International Paralympic Committee has banned Russia from competing in the Paralympic Games in Rio in September, as a result of what it says is athletes' involvement in a state-sponsored doping program.

The ban comes off the findings of the McLaren report which revealed the elaborate doping scheme, which Russia's sports ministry officials "directed, controlled and oversaw". The damning report, which was commissioned by the World Anti-Doping Agency and published last month, also showed how officials regularly made urine samples disappear that tested positive for performance-enhancing drugs and replaced them with clean ones.

The International Paralympic Committee says it has evidence, separate from the McLaren report, that the sample swapping regime was in operation during both the Sochi 2014 Olympic Winter Games and the Sochi 2014 Paralympic Winter Games.

Related: Russian track and field athletes just got banned from the Rio Olympics

"Tragically, this situation is not about athletes cheating a system, but about a state-run system that is cheating the athletes," said Sir Philip Craven, IPC President, in a statement. "I believe the Russian government has catastrophically failed its Para athletes. Their medals over morals mentality disgusts me."

"It shows a blatant disregard for the health and well-being of athletes and, quite simply, has no place in Paralympic sport," Craven added. "Their thirst for glory at all costs has severely damaged the integrity and image of all sport."

The IPC's decision to issue a blanket ban on Russian athletes comes after the International Olympic Committee came to a more measured solution, saying that individual sports federations should be able to determine whether Russians can compete.

Russia came second by medal count in the 2012 London paralympics, the Associated Press reports, and had 267 slots in Rio across 18 sports.

"Medals over morals mentality" just got Russia kicked out of the Paralympics | VICE News
 

FAH1223

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Sanders’ statement comes as Brazil’s elites – virtually unified in favor of Dilma’s impeachment – have taken extraordinary (and almost comically futile) measures during the Olympics to hide from the domestic public, and the world, how deeply unpopular Temer is. Brazil’s largest newspaper, Folha de São Paulo, last month was caught manufacturing polling data when it claimed that 50% of Brazilians want him to stay (in fact, their own poll showed a large majority (62%) want Temer out and new elections held and the paper’s Ombudsman harshly criticized them). Brazilian media spent months hyping the prospect of Temer’s election in 2018 without mentioning the rather significant fact that he’s been banned by a court for running for 8 years because he violated election law (they were forced to mention that last week when the São Paulo prosecutor called attention to this fact in the wake of a new media movement to have Temer run).

Temer himself, fearful of intense booing, demanded that protocol be broken by not announcing his presence at the opening ceremony of the Olympics (he was intensely booed anyway when Brazilians realized he was present). Peaceful ticket-holders have been systematically and at times forcibly removed by Brazilian soldiers from Olympic events for holding “Fora Temer!” (Temer Out) signs, creating international controversy; watching the military use force to silence citizens criticizing an unelected “president” is a jarring image in a country that suffered under a 21-year military dictatorship that only ended in 1985 (a judge last night ruled such removals violate the Constitutional guarantee of free expression).


Sanders’ denunciation of Temer could not come at a worse time for the would-be unelected President. Executives from the construction giant at the heart of the Petrobras scandal, Odebrecht, told investigators this week that Temer’s Foreign Minister, José Serra, received R$ 23 million (US$ 5.5 million) in illegal funds for his 2010 presidential campaign. In just two months in office, three of Temer’s ministers have been forced to resign due to corruption scandals. Even worse, as The New York Times noted yesterday, Odebrecht executives also “told investigators that Mr. Temer [himself] had requested more than $3 million for his centrist Brazilian Democratic Movement Party. As part of a plea deal they are seeking, the Odebrecht executives said the payment had been made in cash through a unit used to deliver bribes, according to Veja, a newsmagazine.”

It’s a bit difficult to justify the removal of democratically elected President by citing corruption, when far more serious corruption scandals are engulfing the person eager to replace her along with his closest associates. But that has been the sham at the heart of this anti-democratic process from the start. As Slate‘s Franklin Foer put it in a long article on Brazil yesterday: “Dilma’s impeachment was a farce, if only for the fact that her accusers have benefited from graft on a mind-bending scale and ginned up the spectacle to distract from their own misdeeds.”


Sanders’ denunciation of the attack on Brazilian democracy is part of a growing international recognition of the illegitimacy of Temer’s rule. Just two weeks ago, “40 Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives published a letter … expressing ‘deep concern’ about threats to democracy in Brazil.” Similar denunciations of Dilma’s impeachment have been issued by British MPs and labor leaders, the Organization of American States, dozens of members of the EU Parliament, and Brazil’s first Pulitzer Prize winner. So dubious is Temer’s standing that, as AP reported last month, many world leaders are avoiding the Rio Olympics so as to avoid the quandary of whether to shake his hand.

Bernie Sanders Denounces Brazil’s Impeachment as Undemocratic, Calls for New Elections
 
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