Bahrain is more dependent on Bernie than vice versa in my opinion. Formula 1 will find another circuit if needed. I think it's more a matter of pride for Bernie, he might think the same race canceled for consecutive years is not good for his image.strad wrote:Here is the real problem from Bernie and F1s point of view.At the same time had Bahrain lost their GP last year and the return wasn't on the cards would we even be discussing the situation now?
We pissed them off by cancelling last year..What do you think they will do if it is cancelled again?
They'll say goodbye and don't come back. And that is what worries Bernie..Not only did he lose money last year and this year, he will lose down the road.
Money is all Bernie and FOM care about.
I find it interesting that there are so many on here who don't care about the downtrodden and abused.
This is your opinion and naturally you may have reasons why you have come to it. I do not see it that way at all and I also have sound reasons for my view.myurr wrote:Actually I believe that the reason F1 has become a political symbol is down to those who called for the race to be cancelled and the media. The former are guilty of politicising F1 by calling for the FIA to cancel the race based on the politics of the region. And the media are guilty for blaming implicating F1 in justifying violence by their mere presence, rather than decrying the use of violence (by either side) in the first place.
Crucial_Xtreme wrote:Ok there are two F1 journos already in Bahrain. If you're on Twitter I suggest giving them a look. Very interesting stuff. Lee McKenzie said today after seeing Ian Parkes tweets, she's worried.
Police marching on protestors
[img]https://p.twimg.com/AqnDiTGCQAIvAb_.jpg[img]
Here's a cordon of about 14 police cars and 50 policemen blocking one road out of Salmabad.
[img]https://p.twimg.com/AqnGYhXCQAA9zdS.jpg[img]
And here's an abandoned street where the locals threw down bricks from a.building site and set a fire to block police
[img]https://p.twimg.com/AqnGs_LCAAMS4aB.jpg[img]
One protester preparing his petrol bomb getting ready to do battle.
[img]https://p.twimg.com/AqnG_JYCAAEDjWS.jpg[img]
Hundreds of women joined the earlier march. The one woman in the foreground here prepared as she is wearing a gas mask
[img]https://p.twimg.com/AqnHwedCQAEzUfU.jpg[img]
In this pic you can see the locals with petrol bombs in hand ready for their fight with the police
[img]https://p.twimg.com/AqnIkcSCQAAFHmD.jpg[img]
All words & images are courtesy of:
https://twitter.com/#!/ianparkesf1
https://twitter.com/#!/byronf1
THIS protest, though, was nothing to do with F1. It just happens to be this week. chants were "Down with Hamad". Bahrain not a happy place.
This particular protest was over the death of local cameraman Ahmed Ismael Hassan Al Samadi. However it's reflective & representative of what takes place regularly in Bahrain according to reporters.n smikle wrote:
what are they protesting? Getting up early in the morning to protest what exactly?
Most of my sources are simply memory of the reports of FiA politics.myurr wrote:@WhiteBlue - you raise a lot of very interesting points that I don't know anywhere near enough to start to refute or confirm what you have claimed. You are accusing Todt and the FIA of a very very high level of corruption. Can I ask what your sources are for all the above? A quick google didn't find any media sources for this, why hasn't it been more widely reported?
If what you say is true then that is a very dire situation at the FIA that requires full investigation and possibly Todt's suspension.
Whilst I agree that the FIA has a certain duty of care to protect participants, we still race in places like Brazil where security is a huge concern. As you point out the situation in Bahrain isn't anywhere near as bad as last year, and the photographs of protests look small scale and contained, so is Bahrain really more dangerous for the crew than Brazil?
What have I said that I cannot prove?JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:@ WB
It may be true, but you could never prove anything of the sort. This is nothing more than circumstantial evidence.
Like I said WB, I concur with what you are saying.WhiteBlue wrote: What have I said that I cannot prove?
- Abdullah ran Todt's middle east campaign - solid media reports about that
- Todt promoted Abdullah to vice president motor sport of the FiA - just check with FiA web site
- Todt needs Abdullah again for the elections next year - it is irrefutable regardless of wether he wants to make a stand himself or influence the election of his successor
- Abdullah has Todt by the balls - well, it is a bit paraphrasing, but the core issue is hard to deny
- The FiA is deviating from it's usual policy of not allowing political demonstrations - every body can make his own conclusions on that. To me it is obvious.
Indeed I agree with WhiteBlue that most of what he says probably is fact, and it's something that I'm not comfortable with.JohnsonsEvilTwin wrote:Like I said WB, I concur with what you are saying.
But the points you just made apply to anyone in office. Obama has CEO's he has to pander too, as does Merkel, Sarkozy and Cameron.
This is nothing new.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lobbying
It may not be right, but it happens every day in every part of the world. There is nothing illegal about it.
Unless there is collusion of some sort that is very hard to prove as my original post alluded to.
I agree. I also think that the drivers and teams will be safe. Even if they have to kill people to make it so.Bahrain is more dependent on Bernie than vice versa in my opinion. Formula 1 will find another circuit if needed. I think it's more a matter of pride for Bernie, he might think the same race canceled for consecutive years is not good for his image.