Jorge Luis Borges: “Soccer is Popular Because Stupidity is Popular”

Image by Grete Stern, via Wikimedia Commons I will admit it: I’m one of those oft-maligned non-sports people who becomes a football (okay, soccer) enthusiast every four years, seduced by the colorful pageantry, cosmopolitan air, nostalgia for a game I played as a kid, and an embarrassingly sentimental pride in my home country's team. I don’t lose all my critical faculties, but I can't help but love the World Cup even while recognizing the corruption, deepening poverty and exploitation, and host of other serious sociopolitical issues surrounding it.

Open Culture

@openculture How elitist-sounding…

(Bookmarking for later reading, to perhaps temper my own prejudices…)

@openculture Borges is not wrong when he says "Nationalism only allows for affirmations, and every doctrine that discards doubt, negation, is a form of fanaticism and stupidity." But he is wrong about the World Cup being stupid!
@openculture
Me: "That is a shitload of bullshit"
@openculture I realize it's from 2014 but several hyperlinks in the article are kaput.
Anyway yes many of us who love Borges really try to step around his politics/theory.

@openculture Borges may have been a genius, but he was evidently also an arrogant, and ignorant, ass.

Football is profoundly meaningful precisely because it has no intrinsic meaning. It's a beautiful and futile activity that we fill with our own meaning, and in doing so create myths that have real, solid manifestation. We English might be moved by the *idea* of (say) Robin Hood, but we can *see* "that tackle by Moore, and when Lineker scored". It's part of the ongoing definition of Englishness.

@openculture Snarking at the idea of a “Stupidity World Championship” but then remembering we had worldwars already