I can sympathisemodbaraban wrote:It is time this thread being closed.
with your emotion, but feel that closing the thread would amount to giving up hope on something that won't go away just by wishing alone. The conversation has gone "all over the place", aptly describing just how challenging and emotional an issue this is - even if its relevance is defined by some pretty peripheral extensions of how each of us experiences his/her own person. We're afraid of our own prejudices, and prejudice directed towards us - a "catch-22". It's part of the human experience to be suspicious of the unknown, especially in "other" people, but we're also sympathetic enough to realise that each of us feels the same. It's what you do with those emotions and that knowledge that matters.
In this sense I'm not afraid to admit that fighting the "racism within" is an ongoing personal process for me and I expect it'll always be so. I don't mind seeing that in other people either, as long as they also show a willingness and an ability to work through their misgivings about others. What set the Barcelona events apart was a highly cynical employment of these human qualities as a means to an end. That is another kind of racism altogether, something that no-one has an obligation to entertain and actually an obligation to confront constructively whenever possible. It stems from a darker, hopeless place where the lowest common denominators apply and personal advantage is sought despite any human cost imaginable. A conscious decision to act destructively, even by a small group of people, can and will lead to losses and tragedies. There are many examples to choose from.
I believe that a F1 rivalry developing to this unfortunate stage can be turned into a positive as well. The timing (and the publicity), as it is, can be viewed as inopportune and very risky: F1 is actively seeking to grow in places like Malaysia, Bahrain, Turkey, Singapore and China. India, Russia, South Korea and even South Africa are in the horizon. Do you think an open display of arrogance and racism will win F1 any friends in these societies? It will only serve to remind people of colonialism and make them suspect that they will be mere cash cows and be assigned a vassal status in the ranks of the F1 "empire". Now, the FIA and the commercial entities within the sport have an incentive to "go the extra mile" to show that any newcomers will be treated as equals, with all the opportunities to participate and benefit as they see fit.
How does this reflect on how I see Spain? While I'm disappointed at some level, I have enormous faith in the diversity, capabilities, innovativeness and imagination that can be found there. I have immensely enjoyed the Roman, Moorish and contemporary architecture to be found on the peninsula, revelled in the culinary delights of traditions that span millennia, had the rhythms run down my spine and cajole the fibres in my muscles to resonate; I've shed secret tears and rejoiced to the silver screen creations of Almódovar, Aménabar and Saura. It's a country where the lights and the shades can contrast sharply on the landscape. But I have nothing but faith in the absolute majority of the people having enough life, love and art in their hearts to realise we need both to truly see anything at all.