The Tokyo Games could end up being a three-week superspreader event that leads to illness and death across Japan and far beyond
A boat sails past illuminated Olympic rings floating in the waters off Odaiba island in Tokyo, Japan, on Thursday, April 1, 2021. The Tokyo Olympic Games organizers said on March 20 that spectators from overseas wouldnt be allowed so as to limit crowd size. Its still unclear how many local fans might be permitted to enter stadiums. Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The time has come to press pause and re-imagine the Olympics. It might even be time, I’ve come to believe, for the entire endeavor to close down for good.
First, consider the near term.
In July, yet another wildly over budget Summer Games, originally slated for 2020 but postponed because of the pandemic, will begin in Tokyo.
The timing remains awful.
Japan has worked hard to tamp down the coronavirus, but now cases are creeping up, and the nation’s vaccination rate is lagging. Organizers just rerouted the torch relay planned this week to reach the streets of Osaka, where one health official said the spread of new variants had pushed the medical system to “the verge of collapse.”
©2019 New York Times News Service