C'mon gentlemen, see the whole panorama....As Fraser says there are many brave, deserving people who feel honoured by the opportunity to carry the torch, but there are also a lot of bums and stiffs and hangers-on who would be no-where near the torch if the Olympics still represented the pinnacle of sporting achievement...sadly that is no longer the case. Go to Fraser's blog and look at the huge trucks, from the so-called "Sponsor" companies, that view this whole thing as a business opportunity. The Olympics has little to do with sporting excellence and everything to do with making us, the consumers, pay for free advertising for the likes of Visa and Coca-Cola. Would they be sponsoring the Games, with the high cost involved, if there was not a net gain for them? I don't think so! For example, if they were doing this out of the goodness of their corporate hearts, would McDonalds require that the organisers shut down local restraunts for the duration, so ruining true local business, removing purchasing choices from games watchers, but allowing them to sell more of their wares?
And look what they have done to East London....business unrelated to the games takes me to the Royal Docks frequently, and all I see recently when I go there is cheap tarting-up of an area that can barely support itself. This tarting-up includes putting companies out of business by demanding that, small though they may be, and though they are the sole form of income for LOCAL folk, they must get out and let the juggernaut that is the Olympics steamroller through, using the land they have occupied for years to erect structures like the ArcelorMittal "Orbit" (
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/olympics/8855623/London-2012-Olympics-UKs-tallest-sculpture-completed-on-Olympic-Park.html#. I've seen less tragic sights beached on the ship-breaking coasts in India!
My concern is: "At what human cost?" Who will support all those east Londoners who have no jobs to go to because their factory has been absorbed into arena that have no clear use nor reason to exist after the next couple of months. What happens to the apprentices whose companies can no longer offer them training and a job? What use will the stadia (run up quickly and cheaply with no long-term plan) be this time next year? Go to Lillehammer, site of the winter Olympics a few years ago if you want to know what will happen: excellent local facilties sitting there doing nothing for much of the time...and in Lillehammer's case, at least it can offer snow for some of the year; who will go to East London?
The involvement of the little people, as Fraser says, is decent and honorable, but the overall purpose of the games now is to make a few people very rich (richer?) on the backs of the rest of us poor saps that have to pay for something that has completely lost its original purpose and ethos