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Olympics of Genocide, Blasphemy, and Genderbending
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Some of my earliest and most intense memories involve the Olympics. In 1964 I huddled in front of my grandparents’ black-and-white TV to watch Madison, WI newscasters proudly announce that my father had won a silver medal in the Tokyo sailing competition. Though the image quality wasn’t great, we could more-or-less make him out in the clip from the awards ceremony.
Then in 1968 it got even better. I attended the Mexico City Olympics sailing games, held in Acapulco, and watch the races from the spectator boat. One of my few unpleasant memories from Acapulco involves lavish quantities of vomit deposited all over the deck by seasick Mexicans who apparently hadn’t realized what they were getting into when they bought that spectator boat ticket. (Many viewers of the current Paris Olympics reacted similarly to its opening ceremony.)
Watching the sailboat races, tabulating the results day by day, and gradually realizing that my dad was ever-more-likely to win it all, was the ultimate peak experience for a nine-year-old boy. And sure enough, my father and his sailmaking business partner, Lowell North, won the gold medal in the Star class. This time I was present at the awards ceremony. The national anthem has never sounded better. Indeed, it’s been all downhill since then.
But there was a darker side to the 1968 Olympics, one that almost nobody knew about back then: an alleged genocide. According to Wikipedia, “In 2006, former President Luis Echeverría was arrested on charges of genocide” for ordering the massacre of hundreds of peacefully protesting students during the run-up to the games.
If ordering the massacre of 300 protestors is genocide, what should we call Israel’s massacres of tens of thousands in Gaza? And yet the Paris Olympics is allowing Israeli athletes to compete, while barring Russians, based on Russia’s relatively restrained war of self-defense in Ukraine.
I recently flew back to the US from my home in Morocco to visit family, found myself watching the Olympics on a living room big screen, and almost lost my lunch when the announcer referred to “Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine” as the reason the Russian team was banned. “UNPROVOKED?!” I unleashed a string of expletives, and explained to brainwashed Russophobic family members that one could arguably call the Special Military Operation all sorts of things, but unprovoked is not one of them. That is just a baldface lie. No military operation in history has ever been more provoked.
Since that moment I have been boycotting the Paris Olympics. But I can’t completely ignore them. My day job, such as it is, is to offer weekly news roundups on False Flag Weekly News. And the Olympic games, love them or hate them, are definitely news. So instead of watching gymnastic competitions on the big screen while exchanging chitchat with family members, I watched a few clips on the internet and discussed the meaning of it all with FFWN co-host Cat McGuire:
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All right, and how about the Hunger Games news? That is, the Olympics, the Satanic Olympics, says Alexander Dugin.
It opened...with a pale horse.
Behold, a pale h