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Monday, September 01, 2008
Burt Prelutsky :: Townhall.com Columnist
Judging the Olympics
by Burt Prelutsky
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I didn’t want to spoil the Olympic Games for the rest of you, but now that they’re over and done with, I’d just like to say that I’ve always disliked them and wish that they’d just disappear.

Understand, I don’t begrudge Michael Phelps the millions of dollars he stands to make in endorsements. I do wonder, though, why it is that swimmers like Phelps and Mark Spitz get so many more opportunities to take home medals than all the other athletes. If I were a sprinter, for instance, I think I’d wonder why it is that I couldn’t compete in the 40, 50, 60, 70, 80 and 90-meter dash, and not just the 100 and the 220.

As far back as 1936, before I was even born, the Games were already a blight on humanity. That was the year that the International Olympic Committee, the IOC, decided to let Adolph Hitler play host even though the Nazis had officially excluded German Jews from competing.

Although 1936 is best-remembered because the great Jesse Owens embarrassed Hitler by showing the world that Aryans weren’t so superior, after all, at least when it came to running and jumping. What is often overlooked, however, is that the American Olympic Committee, at Hitler’s behest, replaced the two Jewish runners, Marty Glickman and Sam Stoller, in the 400-meter relay. The president of the IOC, Avery Brundage, was only too happy to comply. After the Games, he even went so far as to praise the Nazi regime at a German-American Bund event held at Madison Square Garden, and, in 1938, his company was awarded the contract to build the German Embassy, in Washington, D.C.

Brundage, by the way, was the fellow who refused to restore the Olympic medals to Jim Thorpe before Thorpe passed away. The medals had been taken away from him when it was discovered that he had been paid to play baseball prior to the 1912 Games. The fact that Thorpe died without his medals shouldn’t be too surprising, considering that it was Brundage who had blown the whistle in the first place. But why, you ask, would anyone care if Thorpe, who earned his medals in track and field, had played in a few professional baseball games? Could it possibly have been because one of the Americans he’d bested when copping the gold medals in the decathlon and the pentathlon was none other than young Avery Brundage?

Although Brundage professed that his only motivation for denying Thorpe the return of his medals was his belief in the purity of the Olympics as a venue for amateur athletes, he had no problem sanctioning “amateurs” from the Soviet Union and the rest of the Eastern bloc nations, all of whom were paid to train and compete by their governments. Apparently when it came to dictatorships, Mr. Brundage never played favorites.

But if Brundage was the only reason I disliked the Games, I would have had 36 years in which to get over my pique. He did retire, after all, soon after the 1972 Olympics. Those were the Munich Games at which Palestinian terrorists massacred 11 Israeli athletes. There were many people who thought that after the blood bath, the Games should have been called off, but, predictably, Brundage wasn’t one of those people. All things considered, I suppose the good news is that he didn’t send the terrorists home with a suitcase filled with gold medals.

I first became disenchanted with the Olympics in 1948. Even though I was just a little kid -- maybe because I was just a little kid -- the whole shebang just seemed terribly hypocritical. I’d hear people talk about how the Games were supposed to be a showcase for athletic achievement, with individuals, not nations, competing against one another. But I could plainly see that was just a lot of hogwash. Every single day, the newspapers would report how many medals the U.S. had won, as opposed to how many the Soviet Union and East Germany had claimed. It was just silly propaganda, as if America could only prove that we had a superior system to theirs because our athletes could shotput or pole vault better than the Reds.

This year, it was just more of the same. The media boasted that the U.S. had won 110 medals, whereas China had only copped 100. But the fact remains that they won 51 gold medals to our 36, and it is just infantile to pretend that all medals are of equal value.

Once you get past the glitz of the Olympics, they’re farcical. For instance, long before the likes of Barry Bonds, Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa, were making a mockery of baseball records, everybody was making jokes about steroids giving the East German women not only the strength and stamina of men, but, more often than not, hairy chests and five o’clock shadows.

All through the years, the Olympics, allegedly dedicated to good sportsmanship and fair competition, prove that they’re about as decent and honest as Chicago politics. In 1968, in return for making their dreams of competing in the Olympics a reality, a couple of boneheads named Tommie Smith and John Carlos gave America the finger by raising their black-gloved hands in the Black Power salute. In 1972, the referees turned the basketball final into a bad farce by twice adding seconds to the clock so that the Russians could finally manage to eke out a one-point victory over the U.S. In 2002, two Canadian skaters had to share a gold medal with a Russian couple all because the French judge conspired with her colleagues from Poland, the Ukraine, Russia and China, in order to guarantee their votes for the French couple performing in the upcoming ice dance competition.

In 2002, the IOC found itself mired in a scandal when it came out that several, if not all, of the Committee members had been bribed to bestow the Winter Games on Salt Lake City.

This year, with all the countries to choose from, the IOC, true to form, saw fit to reward China, no doubt out of appreciation for China’s efforts to promote peace, liberty and goodwill, around the world.

Avery Brundage, who never met a totalitarian state he didn’t like, would have been so proud.

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About The Author
W. Burt Prelutsky is an accomplished, well-rounded writer and author of "The Secret of Their Success: Interviews with Legends and Luminaries."
 
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AGREED
Agreed,agreed,agreed, etc.etc.

As a further note, the inclusion of water polo, beach volley ball and the other grotesque pastimes is insane.

While we are at it, any competion that has to be judged to determne a winner should be banned.

Hardly A Surprise...
Most slobs (see photo above)
don't enjoy athletics
Bluto seems to be no exception

If you "dislike" the Olympic games

so much and "wish that they’d just disappear", then REFRAIN FROM SWITCHING THE CHANNEL ON old man. Nobody has a gun to your head.

I enjoyed watching this summer. Swimming, volleyball, men and women's gymnastics (yes, even the contests where chinese gymnists claimed to be 16 and were actually 14... at least Beijing was publicly exposed). It's an honorable tradition.

funny thing
for a long time ive felttha=e same way about you

Will, as usual, is quite right
If you don't like it don't watch it.
Similarly, if you don't like criminal assaults on the streets, don't watch!
Don't like drug dealers in your neighbourhood? Don't watch
Don't like the dumbing-down of educational institutions? Don't watch!
Don't like Burt's columns? Don't read 'em!
Hate evil and oppression? Ignore 'em.

What kind of an idiot would call
cheating an "honorable tradition"?

I can't run, but I can travel.

Burt, I never cared for the Olympics either, but one day I reviewed our Travel Journal, and added this to our book on Travel Anecdotes. We did not visit any of these cities because they held the Olympics, and we only visited a very few of the Olympic sites.

We have visited 12 (Albertville, Calgary, Chamonix, Cortina d'Ampezzo, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Innsbruck, Oslo, Salt Lake City, Sarajevo, Squaw Valley, St. Moritz, Turin) of the 19 cities where the 20 modern Winter Olympics have been held.

Add St. Moritz, and Innsbruck, that held Olympics twice, Vancouver, scheduled to hold the 2010 Olympics, we have visited the locations of 15 of the first 21 winter Olympics.

============

We visited 15 (Amsterdam, Antwerp, Athens, Atlanta, Barcelona, Berlin, Helsinki, London, Los Angeles, Montreal, Munich, Paris, Rome, St. Louis, Stockholm) of the 21 cities where the 25 modern
Olympic Games have been held.

Count Athens, London, Los Angeles, and Paris, that held the Olympics twice, and we have visited
19 of the cities of 25 modern Olympics.

=========

In 1989 we visited Olympia, the site of the original Olympic Games, 3,000 years ago.


Will, cheating, and the column
All have to understand Will believes in cheating. He posts here under more than one name. Advancing his belief is more important than anything else. And that means anything goes. He detests certain columnists and has been reported as a paid poster for others unknown.

Good column, and some nice points by the author.

Chi-com apologist
Red China has hired an army of posters about a half of a million strong. The average pay rate is 50 cents per posting in Chinese language. Chinese who are anti-communist have given the army a nick name, called "50 cents gangsters"

This Will fellow,"reported as a paid poster", may be better paid?

I have to admit ...
I don't care a bit about the Olympics. But, one thing that came out in the news is that a woman in her 70s was sentenced to a year in a labor camp in China for filling out an application to protest. Now, that's China!

Judging the Olympics
Yeah, I agree about this perversion of amateurism in the Olympics and certainly in virtually every American school too. Sports is the new idolatry of most, only eclipsed by their disgusting adulation for their pets, dogs especially. My thoughts are the animal wackos are closet misanthropes and probably harbor any number of other "disorders."

No $ale
I notice Prelutsky waited until this extremely popular event was over before committing his outrage to a column.

Yes, there is a part of the Olympics that is sleazy...illegal drugs to enhance physical prowess, duplicity in what constitutes an athlete's "amateur" status, political "statements" from athletes, etc.

But the American people tuned in and watched this event in record numbers.

And the heroics of Phelps was something that millions of Americans applauded.

I'd much sooner watch an Olympic swimming event than read Prelutsky's sanctimonious columns.


Get Over It
I'd hate to be related to this guy. He's held a grudge against the Olympics for over half a century. Imagine if his wife overcooks his bagel in the morning.

Good One
Well Burt, I’m glad to see that they finally got last week’s column up today.

Hahaha, the Olympics. I can say this year, that other than a few snippets on the news, I didn’t watch any of the Olympics. The Olympics and the U.N. have both become synonymous with incompetence and corruption.

I see the trolls got in early on this one. Too bad TH hasn't given us a flush lever yet.

Rumor Alert: Local Olympic Sleaze
I don't recall the year, but it was the year they'd built the Colosseum in Los Angeles for the Olympics to be held there.

There was a company that had been called "Olympic Dry Cleaners". They had that name for years before there was ever a thought of having the Olympics in LA.

Well, the folks in charge decided *nothing* in LA could be called "olympic" without paying the appropriate royalties. Nevermind who came first.

The company, who refused to cave to the extortion, was eventually drummed out of business.

I don't know any details -- and be warned, it may only be a nasty rumor that I'd heard, which is why I have no details -- but it wouldn't surprise me in the least.

Good article, however...
The Olympics serves as a healthy way for athletes from one culture to meet athletes from other cultures and to do it in a way where each of these people is honored as an Olympian. Is it perfect? No. But it does serve overall as a vehicle to put people together.

Can it be taken advantage of? Yep. Should it be abandoned? IMO, nope.

Put the Olympics out of their misery!
I am a 73 year old sprinter, an athlete all my life, and I agree wholeheartedly with Bert. I think the Olympics are an awful waste of time, resources and effort. As with everything else, they have become extremely corrupt. The judging has always been a disgrace, performance enhancing drugs are still widely used though undetected and the entire silly sideshow should be put out of its misery.

Nothing about the modern Olympics is what athletic competition is supposed to be about. This year they were nothing more than communist propaganda writ large and flashy to seduce the entire world with amazement. To make the greatest case for their superiority, the Chinese cheated whenever they could, and I'm sure they did quite often though I only saw a little of the competition.

Shame on America for legitimizing the games by participating. We have no integrity where sports are concerned because we do not understand from the depths of our souls how profoundly wicked this kind of evil really is, how it deadens the soul and destroys the body.

Several excellent points, but...
the jab at Mark Spitz and Michael Phelps is completely unwarranted. Prelutsky obviously has no knowledge of competitive swimming to imply that such landmark athletes jacked up their medal count due to an unusually large number of swimming events as compared to other sports. The notion that "swimmers like Phelps and Mark Spitz get so many more opportunities to take home medals than all the other athletes" is erroneous and absurd. There were 34 swimming events in Beijing, compared with 47 athletics (track and field) events. Furthermore, there are fewer distances contested in swimming (just a 50, 100s, 200s, 400s, and a 1500 for men, not the 30s, 40s, 50s 60s, etc. Prelutsky alludes to) than in track. Nobody is stopping Usain Bolt from entering, say, the Olympic marathon. If you're good enough in a given event, you'll go to the Games. Spitz and Phelps earned every precious ounce of their Olympic hardware through years of hard work. I detest the petty politics of the Olympics and the fact that the recent Games were hosted by an oppressive Communist government, but Prelutsky is pissing on two of the greatest athletes in history, both of whom have represented the United States in outstanding fashion.

Sports versus Politics
If sports as a human endevour, are as corrupt and wasteful as the author says, I would say politics is even worse as demonstrated at the current election, they should both be eliminated.

medals
I don't know why they give out medals.Don't they realize that they are hurting the losers self esteem.

JamesMa:
"The Olympics serves as a healthy way for athletes from one culture to meet athletes from other cultures ..."

Why is this a crying need? So what if they never meet?

I'm with you, Burt
I quit watching much of the Olympics shortly after reaching adulthood and being smacked up side of the head by reality. The high ideals fed to me in my youth about the glory of sport didn't pan out in the School of Hard Knocks with advanced study at the Universtity of Viet Nam.

Corruption and cheating is a tradition going back to ancient times. Athletes competing in classic Greek games would scoff at the crude methods Tonya Harding used to take out her competition. You literally were putting your life on the line in the old days where your opponent could achieve victory by snapping your neck. Officials who weren't already biased for the home team, could be bribed, intimidated or shamed into making the right call, just like now.

Guess that proves once again, those who don't know History are doomed to repeat it.

J
I hate to break this to you but swimmers are not the greatest athletes.

Go, Burt!
Bah, humbug and Amen.

Jerebaub
What are you TRYING to say? What a stupid mishmash of a post you wrote.

Michael Phelps is a great swimmer and seems like a good guy but... "heroics"?

Jerebaub, try going for quality, not quantity in your posts. Less is more, at least in your case. You talk too much.

Thank you
Thank you for all of the incontrovertible facts proving the Games are a farce. I think the Hitler details were enough all by themselves.

I am a do-er and not a watcher, myself. We raised all four of our kids to participate in sports as well as art and music. As adults they continue to lead active involved lives. Voyeurism is deadly.

Sorry Burt
there is nothing wrong with the premise of the Olympics just the people running it.

Don't blame the athletes for the lack of honesty and integrity in the Olympics. Connect the dots. America is a great country because we believe in honesty, integrity, and fair play. The other countries don't and that is why they are not America and not as good.

The Olympics and it's circumstances are a good barometer of what is going on in the rest of the world. It showcases the attitudes and mindset of other countries. The psychology if you will, and that is important.

The games are not on the field
I hate the Olympics because it's not about the sport but about the countries, the "interesting athlete stories" etc. I get to watch synchronized swimming I wonder when the ballet will become an event. I rather watch a bunch of 8 year old play anything. In their youth they understand the nature of competition better than any drug addicted olympic athlete. It's all about the money, and they disrespect the idea of athletic competition.

Mixed Emotions
I used to love the Olympics until the invention of the "Dream Team." Once the Olympics were officially handed over to professional athletes, I lost a great deal of interest. I still watch to some degree because I like to see democracratic countries win over the socialists countries. Why? Because it is once again shows that freedom and inner motivation trump forced participation as in China where children are removed from their homes at an early age if they show any athletic promise.
Face it, whereever there are human beings, there is going to be corruption. Should we abandon the idea of the Olympics or any other elvated idea/endeavor because people don't always live up to the expectations? I hope not.
I don't know what the answer is to the Olympics, but I like the idea that for a few weeks the world tries to put aside its usual routine to focus on something positive.

they should call it “marathon +.”

As for swimming, badminton, volleyball, etc., when I visited the ancient town of Olympia, Greece, I saw no sign of a swimming pool. That doesn't mean there wasn't one, just that I didn't care enough for swimming to look for a pool.

All this talk about cheating in the Olympics, such as the East German Women who became Go-men thru the use of pills, the age problems in China, and the drug uses by so called athletes in most any sport (perhaps Cialis, Viagra and Levitra are the most used sport enhancers), how about the change in the most famous activity in the Olympics, the activity that started the whole thing.

And by the way, if you think this is just my imagination, Google “imagines” “distance, original marathon” with 6,920,000 hits.

After a battle the messenger is supposed to have run to Athens without stopping, then dropped dead upon arrival. That feat inspired the Marathon race, as run in the Olympics, and that race is now measured as 26 miles and 385 yards.

The legend of Pheidippides was honored by a 24.85 mile (40,000 meters) run from Marathon Bridge to Olympic stadium in Athens.

At the 1908 Olympic Games in London, the marathon distance was changed to 26.2 miles to cover the ground from Windsor Castle to White City Stadium, with the 2.2 miles added on so the race could finish in front of royal family's viewing box.

This added two miles to the course, and is the origin of the Marathon tradition of shouting "God save the Queen!" (or other words relating to the Queen) as mile post 24 is passed.

So these days they should call it “marathon +.”

I couldn't run or walk that far, so I drove the original Msrathon.

H2O
what?
no more synchronized swimming?

ab normal
lancaster, mexifornia
push 1 for english gringo

jobless
in 1984, the olympic committee and the city of Lost Angeles gave large donations to 1 charity and another created for the lympic events.
they bussed thousands of jobless (refered to as homeless] to my city. we never had a homeless problem before since the winters here are sometimes really cold and milder in the Illegal Alien Drug Gang Sanctuary City [viva la raza]. since 84 we've had the bums, druggies, mentals dwindle in numbers, but still in significant amounts.
the mentally impaired cannot be forced into therapy unless they agree. what a law that was.

thanks l.a.

adios
harvey
lancaster, taxifornia
el pusho uno poro english

Olympic Champs and Chumps
Thank you, Burt, for your perspective on this. Until you catalogued all the hypocrisy in the Olympics it had only a limited impact on me. I still like to see the competition though. On the individual level there is real greatness taking place. But even that could be changing with the political and financial pressures the way they are. I will remember this article.

Also:

I give henny penny a perfect 10 for her Olympic rebuke to will five comments into the thread.

But Jerebaub, OTOH, should be disqualified from any future competition as he says he "noticed" the timing issue of Burt's commentary . . . as if Burt was trying to sneak it through by highlighting it in his opening paragraph or something?!

J
Swimmers do have more events to compete in than do runners or pretty much any other type of event. Not to take away from what Phelps did because few swimmers can excel in as many different strokes as he had to do but because they do have, as an example, four different events at the 100m distance as well as the medleys and the relays. It would be as if the 100m sprints also provided a 100m sprint backwards, a 100m sprint sideways, a medley of these and relays of them.

WHO CARES WHAT YOU THINK BURT

.....Shut the TV off and go play dominos with your cronies .....COLOSSUS

The Writer Stops By
I can't figure out why those two resident scholars, Jerabaub and baseballdoc, not only waste their time reading my pieces, but then waste additional minutes letting everybody know they've squandered this most precious commodity. I enjoy mysteries as much as the next guy, but only those that have logical solutions. There is nothing logical about reading a piece and then saying, "Who cares what you think, Burt?" The obvious answer, baseballdoc, is that you either care or you are a simpleton in desperate need of a life.

Sincerely, Burt Prelutsky

5 Stars Burt!!!!!!!!!!!!
The Olympics are a farce by any measure. Certainly not as originally intended now matter which venue.

Furthermore, (yawn) who decided that sysnchronized swimming, synchronized diving, beach volleyball, and a lot of the pansy type sports are the ones we are supposed to watch?

What about all the equestrian, archery, shooting, fencing, shot put, and the other REAL competitions?

I guess we only get to see the sports that we are sure to win at. That initself is B.S.

To say the least it was BORING.

PS. you Libtards really do need to get a life. Why don't you just blog on MoveOn.org instead of bothering us?

baseballdoc Colossus in TX
Evidently you care what he thinks. Perhaps you should take your own advice and not read this author's articles.

I agree with Burt, and am sorry to see even mediocre TV shows preempted by the tiresome olympic coverage.

Burt
You beat me to it. I was going to respond to COLASSUS (or baseballdoc)on his pithy comments. Why would you waste your time reading a writer you find so uninteresting and then waste your time responding to his article?

Burt, I agree with your points but I do watch some of the Olympics. As a distance runner I have always liked watching distance races because I can relate to the difficulty completing the distance. But so many of the new competition is so bogus! And this Olympics was so over the top by NBC in its coverage of the Peoples Republic (yeah, right) of China. Enough to make one gag!

well done burt
but, what can you do, all the politicians are in (more than 80 heads of states attended beijing08, first USA president attended on foreign soil), all the corporations are in, tv ratings are high, billions of dollars at stake, olympics is here to stay. at least it's entertaining tv for two weeks every four years, what else on tv you want people to watch, history channel? it's like tom cruise, you may dislike his scientoloy, but his movie works at the box offices, so like or not, he is still the man.

It is worth noting...
...that the '36 games were awarded to Germany (both Summer and winter) in 1931, several years before Hitler took over. The Beijing games were awarded in 2001, long after it had been clear to any objective observer that the PRC had long been a totalitarian state with a history of brutal repression and the quashing of free speech, free press, and freedom of religion.

Personally, I find the games themselves to be interesting primarily because there are sports involved that you don't often see here in the US, and, yes, I root for the US when we're playing.

The biggest problem with the Olympics is that they are run by an organization that is much like the UN: an overbearing, bloated, international burocracy that shares a major characteristic with most international burocracies: They don't uphold the ideals of Freedom and Democracy like the US does.

A few things
First off, China--to any objective observer and in regards to China few TH posters are--is not a totalitarian state. The Olympics was also awarded to Moscow in 1971 when it was hardly a nation dedicated to freedom and to the Republic of Korea in 1981 just a few months after the brutal crackdown in Kwangju, the US hosted the games in 1904 and 1932 and for many Americans the US both under the sanction of law and outside of it could be as brutal as China.

I agree with Bert that it is long past the time for the Olympics to be once again retired to the history books and end this silly farce.

He also forgot to mention the fact that Taiwan has to participate under a false name--Chinese--Taipei, is not allowed to display its colors during the opening ceremonies, nor have its national anthem played in the rare event it wins a Gold Medal (It has only won two Gold medals ever both in 2004 in women's Taekwondo), and contray to what people have claimed here, this was due to Canada and not China. In 1976 when the Canadians hosted the games in Montreal, Canada refused to allow Taiwan to use the name Republic of China as Canada that very year had switched recognition to the PRC. Instead of agreeing to the Canuck demand, Taiwan boycotted the 1976 games. And continued its boycott in 1980 in Moscow after the International Olympic Committee recognized the PRC as the sole legal representative of China in November of 1976 and began to refer to Taiwan as Chinese-Taipei in 1979. Taiwan's last participation in the Olympics under its real name was the 1976 Winter Games in Innsbruck, Austria--Taiwan did not medal in those games.

It rejoined the Olympics along with China who also boycotted the 1980 games in LA in 1984--both also participated in the Sarajevo Winter Games.

Will
I do wish the games would simply disappear. And I watched very little of them. I watched Taiwan play an inning against the US in softball (but as I saw who they were playing I turned it off once the US scored its first run, glad Japan won the Gold and add at least some degree of parity to that sport) and watched a few innings of Japan and the ROK in baseball. I wouldn't have cried much over not seeing either though.

Just because you don't like the Olympics doesn't mean you don't like sports.


Denny
The protest was over losing their homes for development in Beijing. Their names are Wu Diaoyuan, 79 and Wang Xiuying, 77. They applied to the government for a protest permit during the Olympics and were informed they had been sentenced to Reform through Labor known as a Laogai for a year and were placed under surveillance by a government-backed neighborhood group. How much reform through labor these two old woemn could have done is unclear as in the case of Wang she is nearly blind and disabled. The story has been reported in the American press both NBC, Newsweek, the New York Times and CNN among others reported the case. About 10 days after the story broke, China reveresed itself and the two will not be sent to a laogai. No reason for the reversal was given--I expect the intense international media coverage and outcry was the reason.

But that is China's way and stuff like this goes on all the time with the government taking property for what it wants, no one said here that China was a bastion of freedom. But in the US, they'd have lost their homes too, the US simply wouldn't have put them in a work game for screaming about it--Kelo ring a bell? How many people has Wal-Mart forced off their property in the last 20 years or so?

Honor
So tell me James Ma, in your opinion does it honor those from Taiwan when they can't use the name of the country or fly the colors or have the national anthem played?

And jerabaub

"But the American people tuned in and watched this event in record numbers."

Shows many Americans have no life and are easily entertained.

"And the heroics of Phelps was something that millions of Americans applauded."

If you think Phelps is a hero, you are greatly mistaken. When Phelps jumps into a swimming pool to save a drowning child, then I'll consider him a hero--at this point he is not.


Olympics
Simple "ditto" should suffice. Didn't watch one minute of the spectacle.

Akagi
Your sunk, and I am dead, cheers....

CharletonHeston
Actually if you'd take a trip to Gunma Prefecture just to the north and west of Tokyo in the far northwest of the Kanto Region you'd find a mountain known as Akagi-yama at a little less than 6000 feet ASL. Is the state of Arizona also sunk because a ship named for it now lies rusting away at the bottom of Pearl Harbor?

And what does my name have to do with the topic at hand, what are you 13? Don't you have anything to post that is at least remotely related to the subject?
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