Oh, 100% agreeRight there is right thing to do
but we would be doing more wishful thinking than Go West
(that is a 90s fringe hit reference that few will get)
Oh, 100% agreeRight there is right thing to do
And the UCI won't pull the plug because if they were to do it with Israel they would have to the same with UAE (in the very least).
I don't think so, this would only really be the case for pre-2023 Israel. The promotion of Israel today is a very different proposition to the promotion of the UAE.There's a 0% chance of this team or a predecessor missing out on the Tour next year.
Even if Adams suddenly decides to pull the plug or sell the team, someone is going to jump in and buy the license and take most of the riders. (And that is if Premier-Tech doesn't go solo for the next three years)
And the UCI won't pull the plug because if they were to do it with Israel they would have to the same with UAE (in the very least).
I don't think so, this would only really be the case for pre-2023 Israel. The promotion of Israel today is a very different proposition to the promotion of the UAE.
I'll try to stay within the rules and so I will be neutral as to the morality, but the 'sportswashing' of the UAE is basically the promotion of a regional geopolitical meddler (same goes for most countries); removing the link between the state and oil (same goes for many cycling teams); and 'washing' the country of its apartheid-style labour system and abuses of political dissidents (which have been alleged for some Palestinians in Israeli prisons pre-2023, too).
It is possible to draw a line between these activities and those of post-2023 Israel. The situation is more like Gazprom and Russia – alleged war crimes, alleged ethnic cleansing, and attempts at territorial expansion. The UCI can distinguish between this and UAE/pre-2023 Israel/Bahrain. It isn't pretty, but it is tenable.
I would of course prefer these teams to leave altogether (along with the petrochemical or hydrocarbon teams), but like you said it is wishful thinking. I don't think, though, that sidelining the promotion of Israel necessarily leads to the end of the UAE in cycling.
That was on the initiative of IOC, not UCI. I think such a decision will only be made on a much higher level than cycling/UCI/ASO.I don't think so, this would only really be the case for pre-2023 Israel. The promotion of Israel today is a very different proposition to the promotion of the UAE.
I'll try to stay within the rules and so I will be neutral as to the morality and I think this is directly related to cycling and the funding of teams within the sport. The 'sportswashing' of the UAE is basically the promotion of a regional geopolitical meddler (same goes for most countries); removing the link between the state and oil (same goes for many cycling teams); and 'washing' the country of its apartheid-style labour system and abuses of political dissidents (which have been alleged for some Palestinians in Israeli prisons pre-2023, too).
It is possible to draw a line between these activities and those of post-2023 Israel. The situation is more like Gazprom and Russia – alleged war crimes, alleged ethnic cleansing, and attempts at territorial expansion. The UCI can distinguish between this and UAE/pre-2023 Israel/Bahrain. It isn't pretty, but it is tenable.
I would of course prefer these teams to leave altogether (along with the petrochemical or hydrocarbon teams), but like you said it is wishful thinking. I don't think, though, that sidelining the promotion of Israel necessarily leads to the end of the UAE in cycling.
No, I am aware of the UAE's presence in the wars in Ethiopia, along with that of Turkey and China, and their actions in Sudan.Yeah it isn't the same cause you and many others simply do not know (or don't care about) the barbaric things UAE sponsors in Africa.
I agree, I don't think the UCI will take that sort of leap. I think they could do, but they would open themselves up to such extensive criticism that they won't.That was on the initiative of IOC, not UCI. I think such a decision will only be made on a much higher level than cycling/UCI/ASO.
No, I am aware of the UAE's presence in the wars in Ethiopia, along with that of Turkey and China.
There is just a tenable difference from the UCI's perspective of indirect sponsoring of alleged war crimes (which would cover the UAE, XDS-Astana, and any teams with close links to quite a few Western governments, especially the USA) and directly partaking in alleged war crimes.
That is all I am saying. I am not commenting on whether one is more immoral than the other (an endless debate that is of little value), just that the UCI can feasibly end the sponsorships of teams directly concerned with the promotion of, say, ICJ-indicted countries partaking in alleged war crimes while also not removing the UAE from cycling. And like I said, it isn't a pretty distinction, but it is one that can be self-contained.
Yeah, time will tell protesters aren't allowed to win becaue most people dislike anarchy.Currently UCI doesn't allow it, for organiser to remove a team that causes high risk and protests. The team itself i guess could do it.
Next year IMHO it will start at Giro already, that is if things stay the same as they are now. And after Vuelta there are still some races in 2025 season, on where it's reasonable to expect protests.
This indeed is another aspect of it, kudos to Jonas for pointing it out, some riders are prepared to endure it due to understanding on why the protests are happening. Still, IMHO other parties should do more, not to wash their hands and watch on how riders are the ones that need to deal with it on the road. It further show on how there is a total lack of empathy, on where it comes to riders safety in terms of governance.
Time will tell but i am almost certain that baton won't fix this one. We'll see.
What you're doing is almost the exact definition of a "whataboutism". Obviously there's a degree of hypocrisy involved when all the protests are against Israel and none against any of the other dodgy sponsors... but you can't dictate what people care about and right now a lot of people care about the situation in Gaza.Yeah it isn't the same cause you and many others simply do not know (or don't care about) the barbaric things UAE sponsors in Africa. It isn't just about oil or "modern slavery".
That was on the initiative of IOC, not UCI. I think such a decision will only be made on a much higher level than cycling/UCI/ASO.
Yeps@AmRacer
We'll see.
Eventually IOC and UCI aligned their views by adopting joint resolution in 2023 but that doesn't mean UCI has not made any steps before that in 2022, basically immediately after the invasion has started, IOC and UCI joint resolution and alignment of views on the other hand took some time.
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The UCI adopts a resolution in relation to the Olympic Movement’s position on the subject of sanctions taken against Russia and Belarus
The Management Committee of the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) met on 2 and 3 February in Hoogerheide (Netherlands), on the sidelines of the UCI Cyclo-cross World Championships, which are being held in the North Brabant town from 3 to 5 February.www.uci.org
If that wouldn't have happened then protests would be the natural outcome. Or if for example UCI would have waited for one year, then IMHO protests would emerge also.
Considering the difference in magnitude, I would just call it irony, not hypocrisy. That word is thrown around too easily.They don't see the hypocrisy. Reading this topic is actually hilarious.
What you're doing is almost the exact definition of a "whataboutism". Obviously there's a degree of hypocrisy involved when all the protests are against Israel and none against any of the other dodgy sponsors... but you can't dictate what people care about and right now a lot of people care about the situation in Gaza.
Is it now?I don't think so, this would only really be the case for pre-2023 Israel. The promotion of Israel today is a very different proposition to the promotion of the UAE.
True, and I apologise for missing out Sudan – but I think the UAE's involvement there is quite similar to their involvement in Ethiopia, which also had incredibly large death tolls.Yeah well, I can't really go into it here, but you are missing one very important country where a genocide is happening right now, with more deaths (estimates, not confirmed) than in Gaza.
You're kinda proving my point btw. You say that the UCI is probably fine with it cause they pay some goons to do it for them instead of doing it themselves. Which also just means, they are fine with it because people do not know or care about it.
Funny how the people saying "why do you care so much about X but not about Y?" never say that because they think you should care more about Y but because they think you should care less about X
The word "whataboutism" isn't aimed at ending a discussion. If no protest or no concern is ever valid because something else is just as bad or worse, that's trying to end a discussion. That's what a whataboutism is. And I'm sorry, but it's exactly what you're doing.Ah screaming whataboutism to stop a dicussion. Standard. Yes it is, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with some whataboutism if the people who try to stop people everday lives to make a point and often cross the line while doing it act like they are morally superior but seem to only care about deaths in one part of the world.
if no protest or no concern is ever valid because something else is just as bad or worse,
Comparing it to other conflicts is a viable argument if the argument is that we're basically morally obliged to be outraged and act out. So the question becomes why this conflict in particular. And I think the underlying reasons are fairly obvious.
Yeah nah that's not the reason. It's far from the only proxy war out there.It's because nearly all of us dicussing here are in a western country, most of which bear at least some responsibility for Israel's actions due to decades of implicit or direct support and political cover.