Not a satire

Wish it were.

7 comments:

Grim said...

I have some friends from Brazil who are huge fans of Brazilian soccer. We just watched the Brazil/Spain game together the other night. They'll be horrified, being very peaceful people; on the other hand, I shall have to be highly circumspect about it, given their occasional remarks on how violent we North Americans are.

E Hines said...

Unfortunately, that's not an isolated occurrence; although, hopefully, it's rare.

That shooting seems more recent than 20 years ago....

Eric Hines

Grim said...

Wasn't, or not much more. I remember it well.

Different kind of thing, anyway. It's one thing to shoot a man. It's another thing to stone him to death, behead the corpse, quarter the body, and then put the head up on a stake. That takes commitment.

DL Sly said...

I read this to the VES when I first saw the story -- it was in response to her query, "Um, Mom, is something wrong??" -- and I remembered a comment that Brave's rookie Evan Gattis made earlier this year after yet another pinch hit home run, "When I played in the Venezuelan leagues, if you went 0 for 4, they followed you to your car after the game. You kinda learn to hit in pressure situations...."

Although, now that I think about it, to not only stone, behead and quarter him, but to do so in front of the entire crowd (not a small entity anywhere in S. America wrt soccer matches) followed by the staking speaks, perhaps strongly even, towards *whom* was killed as well, no?

Eric Blair said...

Well, then there's the football war:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soccer_War

That was Honduras and El Salvador.

There is a new professional soccer team in Philadelphia. Their games have been selling out.

Hmmmmm....

Daniel said...

Well, nice to see soccer going back to its roots.

E Hines said...

It's another thing to stone him to death, behead the corpse, quarter the body, and then put the head up on a stake. That takes commitment.

Not sure how much commitment it takes to be/to allow oneself to be caught up in the heat of the moment while in the madness of a mob.

It's the vividness of the memory that makes the shooting seem so recent.

Eric Hines