This article is not an attack on physical exercise or on those who genuinely enjoy football as a sport. Its criticism is directed at the transformation of sport into a global commodity—an instrument of manipulation, political exploitation, and mass distraction. Whether one agrees with its arguments or not, the underlying question remains: how much room do we still leave for nature, authentic human relationships, and individual freedom when our lives become increasingly organized around spectacles designed by others?
Summer evenings in the mountain villages of Dirfys, in Euboea, are simply different. It is a true bliss to unwind, embracing whatever your soul desires, sipping a refreshing drink at some picturesque little café, right next to centuries-old plane trees—though sadly, not many of them are left anymore (neither cafés nor trees). It is one of those rare moments when you allow your eyes, weary from computer and tablet screens, to claim their own free wanderings through these pocket-sized paradises.
Last night, I had arranged to meet my best friend by the little river of Makrykapa, at one of its two cafés shaded by plane trees. But total chaos reigned. A giant screen hung from a tree trunk, scattering merciless noise pollution all around. Below it, at the tables of the little square, spectators of the World Cup matches were roaring at every missed chance to drive the ball into the opponent’s net.
We fled immediately. Back home to the veranda, where the jasmine and basil were competing over which would rule the night air with their intoxicating scents. And above, a full moon hung—a true “goddess ball,” moving slowly and imposingly across its own sky-bound pitch, playing the thematic games that only Nature knows how to conjure for those who love raw quality and grandeur.
We have nothing against sports. On the contrary, exercise is a sine qua non condition for a good and healthy life. It is elite sports and its commercialization that we clash with. Football and the Olympic Games have degenerated into literal dumpsites where every kind of trash rots away: from individualism, stardom, and enrichment, to fanaticism, hooliganism, violence, and nationalism.
We wrote back then about the 2022 World Cup; the one of this year has absolutely nothing to envy from it:
The 2022 World Cup in Qatar Begins: The Opening Ceremony
November 20, 2022


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