We are told that responding to stupid remarks on our online posts is not worth the effort. It is a known fact that most of the people who make these nonsensical rants are a minority but are loud enough to cause embarrassment. In real life, they would be too timid to say anything 'on your face' but gain Dutch courage through the cloak of anonymity and bang away their keyboards with impunity. While most of their shenanigans do not amount to much more than a storm in a teacup, it does excite the feeble-minded, which may describe the majority. Then there are paid trolls who kick dirt to keep a topic alive or plainly bully.
When the Malaysian Sport and Youth Minister was caught posing with the Olympic Badminton Silver Medallist, she was chided as being unpatriotic. The Silver Medal winner, a Thai player, had earlier defeated our player. So, to pose for a photograph, praise his game and label herself as his fangirl was, in the troll's opinion, bad taste and adding insult to injury. This went on for a few days without any rebuttal from the Minister. I was waiting patiently for her to reply.
When the Malaysian Sport and Youth Minister was caught posing with the Olympic Badminton Silver Medallist, she was chided as being unpatriotic. The Silver Medal winner, a Thai player, had earlier defeated our player. So, to pose for a photograph, praise his game and label herself as his fangirl was, in the troll's opinion, bad taste and adding insult to injury. This went on for a few days without any rebuttal from the Minister. I was waiting patiently for her to reply.
Her comeback statement was killer. It turned the tables to paint the Minister as a true patriot, which took me by surprise. She reiterated that as a Sports Minister and a Youth Minister, she had a moral obligation to show the true meaning of sportsmanship. One should not be a sore loser but respect his opponent for his talent and tenacity. Admiring the opponent's skill does not make one less patriotic.
Still on the topic of the Olympics and our national badminton team, our ladies' pair of Pearly Tan and Thina gave a sterling performance despite their eventual falter to the World No. 1 pair from China. Instead of commenting on their never-say-die fighting spirit and the insanely long rallies that never seem to end, a netizen thought it was brilliant of her to highlight the pair's un-Shariah-compliant attires. That is the trouble with the democratisation of thoughts. An idiot has that 2-minute fame in the limelight to garner everyone's attention for all the wrong reasons. We do not know how many other cretins will join the foray and think their nonsensical self-centred ideas indeed need scrutiny! We should not be entertaining these nut cases.
Engaging with these wackos would prove fatal, as influencer Esha found out the hard way.
The story of Arshad Nadeem and Neeraj Chopra comes to mind when discussing sportsmanship and how sports transcend borders. It is said that even though Nadeem popularised javelin in Pakistan after his 5th place in the Tokyo Olympics, funds were scarce for him. When his old javelin needed replacement, he tried to crowdsource it. Although rivals on the field (and through politics), Chopra thought it would be wise to retweet the word around and even send a copy to sponsors and the Government of Pakistan. So when Nadeem won the gold medal in the 2024 Paris Olympics and broke the 118-year-old Olympic record at 92.97m, both mothers sang praises of not their respective sons but both winners. The mothers are now trending as poster girls of sportsmanship and world peace!
Values are passed from generation to generation
ReplyDelete"Remember this Kenyan runner Abel Mutai who was just a few feet from the finish line, but became confused with the signage and stopped, thinking he had completed the race. A Spanish runner, Ivan Fernandez, was right behind him and, realizing what was happening, started shouting at the Kenyan to continue running. Mutai didn't know Spanish and didn't understand. Realizing what was taking place, Fernandez pushed Mutai to victory.
A journalist asked Ivan, "Why did you do that?" Ivan replied, "My dream is that someday we can have a kind of community life where we push and help each other to win."
The journalist insisted, "But why did you let the Kenyan win?" Ivan replied, "I didn't let him win, he was going to win. The race was his." The journalist insisted again, "But you could have won!" Ivan looked at him and replied, "But what would be the merit of my victory? What would be the honor in that medal? What would my mother think of that?"
Values are passed on from generation to generation. What values are we teaching our children? Let us not teach our kids the wrong ways and means to win. Instead, let us pass on the beauty and humanity of a helping hand. Because honesty and ethics are winning!"
Via: The Unique TonyaLe
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