Definition of sport in English
"An activity involving physical exertion and skill in which an individual or team competes against another or others for entertainment."
Definition of motorsport
"any of several sports involving the racing or competitive driving of motor vehicles "
I'll leave to the reader/viewer to make up their own minds about what they saw conciders under what definition.Definition of parade:
"A series of people or things appearing or being displayed one after the other."
as for me though;
motorsport and parades are eachother's opposites, and should be exactly that.
if some or multiple elements cause (a form of) motorsport to become a parade,
something is definately wrong and has to be dealt with.
whether the rules, whether the wishes of teams, whether the wishes of drivers, etc. etc.
if one manufacturer in particular always want to win no matter what, using it as promotion for the brand,
then you are not a motorsport enthusiast - you like a parade, so you can show off your brand/object.
motorsport is not about a parade, it's about competitiion. and quite frankly, that's exactly what has become less and less important
in F1 in the past decades - it's become much more of an economical and commercial means to promote a product - disguised as motorsport (racing),
but clearly exposed by it's key figures that use, abuse, and use any means - including corruption, disguised or not- to achieve their own goals and benefits,
without any (moral) sense or obligation to potential 'opponents' or the platform (motorsport) they are using to empower/enrich/promote themselves.
in the end though, it's clear as day though:
Mercedes and Ferrari absolutely have a lot of power.Power corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely
And Jean Todt, as head of the FIA, has absolute power.
So does Charlie Whiting.
etc. etc.
In all reality, it's a stinking bowl of corrupt power that shake hands on one side, stab on the other side, and lash out all around them.
Bernie was the king of them, but every king has it's reign - and then he dies. Physically or not, Bernie's reign has died. But his stinking corruption still smells
all the way around the world and throughout F1. It's only accepted and unpunished because essentialy, they are in total control - which makes F1 itself,
a totalitarian regime.
It's not something of the past years though, but it has grown into this huge, painful, wildgrowth. And it goes from the top all the way below.
Bernie (though out now), Todt, Whiting, formerly guys like Briatore, Dennis, Montezemolo, all the way to guys like Ericsson, Maldonado, Sirotkin, and
back to guys like Putin, Oil Sheikhs, and right back into the web with people like Claire Williams, Toto Wolff (despite being a amicle guy), Bottas, Suzie Wolff,
and their ties to eachother, including guys like Ocon, and thus Force India, but obviously also cases like Kaltenborn before, but clearly also Sauber, Ferrari,
Perez before @ Sauber.
It's a gigantic mass of connected dots, all shaking eachother hands, holding hands, protecting eachother, forming some cartel.
Interestingly, it kindof reminds me of F1 in the glory days when Senna adressed and exposed the blatant french corruption withing F1, the FIA, tracks like Monaco,
drivers like Prost, through people like Balestre and friends.
So has anything really and actually changed? no.
https://www.autosport.com/f1/news/13500 ... bery-trial
Bernie Ecclestone is facing a civil trial in London connected to the Gerhard Gribkowsky bribery case, following previous actions in the UK and Germany in 2014.
A starting date of October 1 2019 has been set for a high court action launched against Ecclestone by investment concern Bluewaters Communications Holdings LLC.
In 2016, bottom-feeders Sauber and Force India put in a formal complaint with the European Union over how Formula 1 doles out its fat stacks of cash, with the sport receiving upward of $1 billion dollars every year from business deals and partnerships. Apparently, only 60 percent goes to the racing teams, with the majority and minority owners—CVC Capital Partners and Bernie Ecclestone, respectively—stuffing the rest into their already fat pockets. Ecclestone also made the call to sign individual deals with the richest teams, leaving the least competitive to fend for themselves. For example, Ferrari's individually arranged participation fee totals more than the bottom five teams' combined earnings! That's not exactly the kind of practice that promotes fair competition.
Many human rights activists aren't particularly fond of Formula 1's decision to hold a race in Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan, paving over the fact that their prisons are packed full of dissenters, activists, and anyone else who throws a wrench in the autocrats' well-oiled propaganda machine. Azerbaijan hosts a whole plethora of social and political problems, including the steady devaluation of their currency, regular protests, increasing poverty, and gross corruption—all of which Ilham Aliyev aims to "sportwash," according to the Panama Papers, by hosting a relatively boring and unspectacular grand prix. By accepting the Aliyevs' lube jobs, Formula 1 is—like it or not—complicit in Azerbaijan's corruption. Sure, money talks, but a whole slew of countries are eager to join the Formula 1 circuit, countries that … you know … don't jail anyone who speaks out.
Aliyev is the man Bernie Ecclestone approached with a proposal to deliver unto Baku the European Grand Prix. Azerbaijan, where the average monthly wage is $300, is primarily an oil state, which is likely what drew oleaginous Ecclestone to it in the first place. All of the burden of hosting the event falls on the Azerbaijani people, who have spent well over $250 million for hosting rights and infrastructural improvements as part of the deal.
Ecclestone, who surely pocketed many millions more from Azerbaijan in personal baksheesh, responded last year to complaints from human rights organizations that Formula One has a "clear conscience."
and then i can start talking about Guy Ligier.......When Bahrain erupted in the Arab Spring, F1 blithely rolled into the center of a burning city and unfurled its checkered flag. Nothing to see here, Charlie Whiting. Russia hosts a GP in Sochi, despite the fact that its president jails and murders dissidents and journalists. So what's the big deal?
Ecclestone has famously shitty opinions. He is a staunch supporter of murderous strongman Vladimir Putin and mouthy defender of Sepp Blatter, the infamously corrupt former head of FIFA. He told a Russian TV station that he didn't “think there’s any place for democracy, full stop. Anywhere.
but really, i'm wandering off quite far.