Well, here you have my examination (and I'm not laughing):
If this is a case of who's the greater SOB, as Saward, very unprofessionally, puts it, Mosley wins hands (or pants) down. It's easy to detect who is guiltier: in these kinds of fights, the one with the darker soul is left standing...
Piquet's role, if we're going to talk about "desperate measures" hasn't receveived enough criticism.
If Mosley is a lizard with a chequebook, Piquet is a snake with a racing car.
Frankly, taking in account the juicy story you could write, you are left with the impression that journalist are terribly scared of posting anything against Mosley. That's easy to understand: the path of broken writers left behind Mosley's trek through F1 is also impressive.
Cowardice is full of subtleties...
I guess the venom is still in their hearts, so we will learn more dirty things once they decide it is the proper time.
It reminds me of Marius and Julius Caesar fight, among the broken ruins of the Roman Republic (take in account I just re-read Gibbons, so maybe I'm not the best commentator you can find right now). Anyway, it doesn't take a genius to predict that we have a Dark Age ahead.
The spirit of F1 is broken: first Ferrari domination, then a rosary of dirty tricks, now Todt directing the tragedy representation. Is Todt able to do anything? It's like asking George W. to investigate George's invasion of Panama.
Can Mosley say anything about Briatore, when he has discredited the sport more than anyone in history?
I swear I'm not making this up: here you have a word-by-word quote of the
Nika riots in Wikipedia. It's marvelous how history repeats itself:
"
The team associations had become a focus for various social and political issues for which the general Byzantine population lacked other forms of outlet.
The general Byzantine population... they were talking about this forum, I bet.
You have to wonder why somebody would waste time or paper on Mosley's press releases. They sound like "Yes, I robbed, but he robbed more". Fortunately Mosley's opinions have lower credibility than the ones of mafiosi, reposessors or rats: he's a lawyer, after all. That says it all.
He claims (cynicism at its highest peak) that he knew Briatore was guilty, but he left him to work his magic not once, not twice, but several times. And he claims to be
now a good judge of Briatore?
C'mon. "He robbed once, he robbed twice, he robbed three times, he robbed four times, but, hey, now I have become a fair and honest judge, so he is receiving what he deserves!".
Nice: this is the kind of judge that we have had for a decade (a cosmically stupid one, by his own admission).
You have to wonder who's guilty of inspiring this kind of feelings into the CEOs souls. My answer is simple: Ecclestone started everything when he robbed the automobile clubs of their sport and converted it into the spectacle we witness today.
You can't blame Ecclestone alone, he has had his disciples, but if this were Star Trek, he's Palpatine.
Finally, expect more of the same: declarations by Mr. Lux, new investor in Renault (they sound evil, if you ask me, given the current atmosphere that surrounds Renault F1 team).
"Together with Renault,
we intend to run the team with the same values as any of our other investments, prioritising ambitious performance targets without neglecting cost efficiency. We strongly believe that on-track performance can be compatible with business performance, and we will use all our entrepreneurial spirit and commercial know-how to achieve this goal."
Isn't capitalism wonderful?