- Joined
- Jan 27, 2014
I hope Karne doesn’t mind me interjecting my opinion here while she’s probably in bed in Australia; I just have my own issues with your points in reply to her. Her original reply, the context of which you sorta ignored, just pointed out the patently obvious fact that working people don’t enjoy being scrutinized and harassed by untrained, interfering, biased, potentially aggressive nobodies while they’re doing their job, and then also that allowing said, ahem, fans to physically access the judges is potentially dangerous (Here I would point out, in response to your first point, that for this reason the judges/referees are separated from the crowd in some way in basically all sports. And courtrooms, actually. You might note that schools and courthouses and hospitals and sporting events have security, precisely because threats *are* a concern.) I don’t think she implied that tech panels couldn’t perform under the usual pressure of, for example, an arena full of passionate and potentially loud fans. She just said that, basically, not liking for people to breathe down the back of your neck while you’re working doesn’t mean you have a god complex, and I agree with her. All of the rest of this is just you projecting.I can not agree with all this. If you are an impressionable person and are afraid of threats, then your place is not in the judicial panel, be it a sports or civil court, but also the police, the army, and even teaching and medicine and much more.
As for the pressure on the judges that they can get, realizing that hundreds of eyes are closely watching their work, it's just ridiculous to me. If they are highly professional, well-trained specialists (and this is a strong argument in any dispute here that is not questioned), then public control over their work can't stop them from doing their job. After all, football or basketball referees somehow manage in the arenas filled with thousands of screaming spectators and no one demands that the spectators not make noise there.