A TIRADE about the London Olympics last weekend has told us what a few feared all along, writes Clive Betts from the National Assembly press gallery.

The 2012 event is all about one country, and one only. That country is England. The other countries in the British Isles have all along a cheered in unison purely because they didn’t want to be ridiculed as killjoys and patronised by the largest nation in these islands – in particular by its mean-minded tabloid press.

The Independent on Sunday described the east London event as being borne along on “a shameful myth”.

The bid for the  2012 Games “might have been wrapped up in a Union flag, and the politicians might have been on about this ‘benefiting the whole of the UK’”, wrote James Corrigan.

“But this was always about England and only about England.”

He went on to list the way in which Lottery funds were switched from local (Welsh) projects to help pay for construction work in London; the concentration of Olympic venues in England; and the inevitable way in which commercial benefits of the entire fortnight-long event are almost entirely concentrate in the London area.

The opportunity for the diatribe is the likely decision to field in the Olympics a GB soccer team which will consist entirely of England players. It’s happened before, apparently, at the beginning of the 20th century. But what was acceptable then isn’t today.

Corrigan takes up the hearings of the Welsh Affairs Select Committee in the Commons which cut through a lot of the hype we get from London, in particular No 10, about the glories that will flood through every part of the dear old UK.

The committee found – to no-one’s surprise, except that of the true-Brits (ie pro-English) amongst us – that hardly any business contracts were being won in Wales. Which is no surprise; where’s the profit in freighting Coke or Pepsi from Wales to east London for an event lasting a fortnight.

Especially when local businessmen (otherwise known as spivs) reckon they have everything tied up with fellow-spivs from east and south-east London, surely the worst part of Britain for decency.

The final words of Mr Corrigan should be carefully marked :

” In Scotland, Wales and Ulster there will be mutterings about English arrogance and quite rightly, too.

“This will not be a GB team, no matter what it says on the badge. It will be an English team and will be there essentially because of English pigheadedness in steamrolling over the wishes and needs of their fellow home nations.

“Too much of 2012 will be marred by that stench.”

With First Minister Rhodri Morgan firmly tuned into Britishness, and with Plaid held rather painfully by the short and curlies, it is unsurprising that not much has been said down Cardiff Bay about these shenanigans.

But one of Mr Morgan’s own group has had the courage to speak out. Leslie Griffiths, AM for Wrexham, said she “had yet to be contacted by anyone who wants Wales to take part in this project”.

She spoke of fears that Wales will lose its independence in both FIFA and UEFA. In other words, that Wales will become part of England.

The English soccer world won’t worry. Where on Earth is Wales, they will laugh.

Prime Minister Brown is a prime mover is this. He’s too late to stop the Scottish Parliament. But, as he correctly calculates, there is more than one way to skin a cat.

Brown’s Britishness must be rejected.

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HIGH TIME FOR US TO WHINGE ABOUT SCHOOLS’N'HOSPITALS

Not only will Wales suffer financially on a number of fronts as a result of the London 2012 Olympics as Lord ‘Seb’ Coe and his chums motor their way through billions of taxpayer’s pounds in the teeth of what  promises to be the most vicious recession since the 1920′s, the cost of Great Britain’s recent feelgood ego-trip didn’t come cheap.

The old schools’n'hospitals argument, so often used as an excuse to bash Welsh-language education and Welsh culture in general, takes on a somewhat different aspect when you consider that a staggering QUARTER OF A BILLION POUNDS was thrown at British sport in the run-up to the Beijing event to win those 19 gold medals. This amounts to the cost of several primary schools, a number of specialist medical units or a couple of new hospitals. You don’t need Robert Peston to tell you that the cost of the run-up to London 2012
will be far greater.

So those gold medals ­ and the new wave of Great British jingoism whipped up with them – came at one hell of a price. And yet sport at this level is not always about the money thrown at it. To put things into perspective in terms of gold medals per million population, it was little Jamaica that topped the world. A small country with a population marginally less than that of Wales, Jamaica¹s GDP/gold medal ratio was just £900 against GB¹s £90,000 or more.

But hey, come on chaps, don’t let’s be spoilsports, it was all jolly well worth it wasn’t it?

ByLine – Cuneglas the Tyrant

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As we suspected, the 2012 Olympics will result in huge wedges of taxpayers (of Wales and Scotland) money and Sports resources being diverted towards London Team GB in spite of objections. The latest in this sorry saga is that Lord Coe is pressing ahead with a  plan for a Team GB football team:

The creation of the team has been opposed by the Football Associations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland who are concerned it may compromise their individual status within Fifa.

But he said the BOA, which selects teams for the Games, has decided to press ahead with a football squad despite the opposition.

When asked last night about the opposition from the Welsh and Scots, Coe replied bluntly: “F*** em!”

If you wish to express a protest at this arrogance then please sign the No to Team GB petition or  this petition and join the Facebook group.

Hat tip:Little man in a toque and  Amlwch to Magor

More… from Ordovicius

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A little table in the Independent on Sunday revealed the emptiness of claims that the Olympics in 2012 will be a festival that embraces the whole the UK – rather than just London and the southeast of England.

We were all told that the entire “country” would benefit from the event; that, in the words of a Statement of Opinion scribbled by a rag-tag gaggle of Labour AMs, “Wales looks forward to playing a full part in the 2012 Olympics”.

The truth as spelled out on Sunday is that the event and everything about it is being dominated by the home counties; and that the most Wales will get will be BBC TV pictures.

Wales – and the other regions of the UK – were supposed to be able to benefit in so many ways. The Independent looked at who was winning commercial contracts.

We already know how Wales – and the rest of the UK – has been skinned of national lottery funds to pay for the east London jamboree.

And that is not the only way we have been skinned. The Independent (print edition only, not on the web version) said 531 contracts had been signed. Of these, a massive 365 went to London companies; the south-east followed close behind with 102; then the east (ie east of London) with 53.

Beyond that, the figures are ludicrous. Wales has won only three; Northern Ireland, one (but as the UK is fighting as Team GB, the six counties have presumably already joined the republic); and Scotland nine.

Wales has of course by now won its own wee Assembly to fight for our rights. But don’t expect many of its members to expose the shame and sham of the rip-off that London – where our political masters live – has forced on us.

Peter Black is one of the few strong enough to speak out. He wrote on his blog yesterday, “London has sucked all the money and goodwill from the rest of the UK … leaving us with just a few crumbs. Now they want us to give more so as to match the Communist propaganda showpiece we have just witnessed.”

Surely our next job is to disinter the second Assembly’s committee report that was critical of the entire farce.

For, be sure of one thing – criticism of the London Olympics will from now on be viewed as anti-patriotic. And, as this State gets increasingly emptier in its beliefs, it will also get increasingly nationalistic, in the American sense. With the London tabloids screaming their best, rationality will totally quit these isles.

So, where will be the best place to book a holiday in August 2012 ?   There’ll probably be more sense found in Baghdad. Or, if you fancy some peace, what about a trip around the monasteries and churches of Ethiopia ?

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We have all just witnessed the überspectacular opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. Can one seriously imagine the recession-ridden, half-bankrupt, anally-retentive Brits matching that in 2012? Even getting anywhere near to it? Well can you?

The Chinese themed the opening on four thousand years of their nation’s phenomenal history. So perhaps we might expect a jamboree based on the rise of the British Empire, with Lord Seb Coe and his coiffed cohorts waving their batons in the wings? Well, probably not. A good many of the nations of today’s Olympic family would be justifiably disgusted, even up in arms – after all, many of them experienced the full civilising force of its altruistic benevolence.

Just four short years away the Britain of 2012 will be a very different place. Scotland will in all probability have its own national team. Held back by an unholy gaggle of West Brits, New Labourites, Old Labourites, trough-swilling Westminster Labour MPs, Tories, Lib Dems and Great British sycophants, true to form our own dear Wales will no doubt adopt her traditional pose and, God bless her, do what they all do under such circumstances: lie back and think of England.

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