escYOUnited
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Not that I don't care about human rights, but it's off-topic here, like in the international sports events.
If the EBU were to accept "democratic" countries only, we'd have a grand final with ten countries at best.
Well, if the point is just to bash EBU (which like I said might be somewhat justified, I'm not invested enough to care much myself), surely there are better ways to do that than being on the side of an authoritarian country
Yeah that's a super contradictory statement. I really don't understand people who are still naive enough to believe that sports or entertainment can be taken completely separately from the politics and aims of the countries participating; the massive state-supported doping schemes of Russia that have gotten them banned from all those international events alone should be enough proof of that. You realize that everyone here defending Kazakhstan with the "just let them sing!" argument while looking away from their politics is doing exactly what their government wants the average foreigner to do, right?
Nice bit of exaggeration there. Since Hungary and Turkey already left on their own accord, out of the current participants the ones that would genuinely meet the "undemocratic" standard would just be Azerbaijan, Russia, Israel and obviously Belarus, plus if you really want to stretch it a few others that have issues with corruption, lack of transparency and such like Montenegro, Poland with the government they have now, Romania... and that would still leave a hell of a lot more than ten.
Also, I'll leave a bit of reading here: World Report 2020: Kazakhstan | Human Rights Watch
There was nothing naive in my statement. I just look at the bigger picture, in this day and age what kind of good promotion a country such as Kazakhstan could get seriously? No one's been born yesterday. Eurovision is popular but it's not all that, the Olympic Games are a much bigger showcase and yet what do Kazakhs achieve in terms of PR? Nothing.
And purposely ignoring a country isn't any different than acknowledging it imo, it won't change their government's actions anyway.
I guess the joke didn't translate, although the countries you mentioned are the ones there seem to be a "consensus" about: the evil ones because Manichaeism is nice to avoid thinking too much and seeing nuances. But personally, other countries (like my own) like to lecture the entire world about human rights and all that jazz while their exemplariness in terms of freedoms (of expression, of press) and transparency (corruption, justice) leaves a lot to be desired. It all depends on what is one's definition of "undemocratic" I guess.
If the EBU were to accept "democratic" countries only, we'd have a grand final with ten countries at best.
I'm sorry! I didn't want to join this and I have a very high esteem of you since I read your post for years now. But that is completely wrong and misleading.
First of all: by putting "democratic" under quotation marks you insinuate that the term itself is fake and that even the countries who are called democratic aren't such countries. You cannot honestly think that democracy is just a fake concept!
Secondly: How on earth can you deny to the vast majority of the competing countries their status of being democratic? This is not a notion that one should fool around with just to back up an opinion (which I don't discuss here).
Buzz on Twitter is that the announcement the EBU are teasing for a few days might be the moment at last.
I'm not getting my hopes up too much. My heart can't take it.
You let yourself again be fooled by Kazhak officials who claim that they will be invited. Whether of not you like it (and I'm not entering the discussion if it's justified of not) the EBU has said very clearly at numerous times that they have no plans to let them participate. I see no reason why this should have changed since.Buzz on Twitter is that the announcement the EBU are teasing for a few days might be the moment at last.
I'm not getting my hopes up too much. My heart can't take it.