|


The
endurance of snapshot moments of nationalistic fame engendered by
young sportsmen never ceases to amaze, especially if the athlete
is the product of a nation with questionable qualification for its
United Nations seat. Russell Coutts, Chris Dickson and Bruce Farr
(and a spate of other Kiwi ex-Pats) while born on sheep-dung fertilized
soil, acquired their true fame on faraway shores and elected to
settle down elsewhere, than to pay their taxes, raise families and
live their lives on said dung-soil. Indeed, these folks of Kiwi
origin have elected to avoid the brutality practiced in the "Land
of the Wrong White Crowd." This decision, you see, is easy
to understand given New Zealand's observance of the "Tall Poppy
Syndrome," akin to the animal world's "eating its own,"
in which achievers are summarily cut-down to size.
While
these guys might carry NZ passports, they are no more New Zealand
nationals than they are Swiss, Italian, American or wherever their
temporary AC abode may be. Bad? I don't think so, especially when
they are the product of a country that treats their native world-class
athletes like indentured servants, while allowing business slicksters
and promoters free run of the bank.
Get
real New Zealanders! Maybe these hotshots were born Antipodean but
they are now free citizens of the world making their lives and fame
everywhere other than Auckland and its environs. Your only entitlement
as a Kiwi is to feel temporarily proud for the few remaining months
the Cup remains in New Zealand after which the country will once
again be ignored with singular attention given to those sailors
who happened to have been born there.
|