The snowfall from the previous night stopped by morning, and I was able to attend the second day of the conference without trouble. The forecast—about five centimeters of snow—was accurate, and the day turned out to be bitterly cold.
Watching the Winter Olympics in such weather, I found myself noticing something that had bothered me before, but never quite this strongly.
Participation by non-white athletes in the Winter Olympics appears strikingly limited.
I had been aware of this for some time, but it stood out more clearly this time than ever before.
Perhaps this is because the recent Games were held in South Korea in 2018 and China in 2022, and this is the first time in a while that the event has returned to a predominantly white host country. The medal ceremonies, the athletes on the podium, even the women presenting the medals—all appeared overwhelmingly white.
Without host-nation quotas, the number of East Asian athletes is visibly smaller. I did not watch every moment of the opening parade, so I cannot say how many Black athletes participated, but in the glimpses I saw, there seemed to be very few.
Of course, people of diverse backgrounds could be seen in various supporting roles, but proportionally, that may simply reflect the nature of the event.
Winter sports are expensive by definition, and in that sense this imbalance may be inevitable. Skiing, skating, and sledding began as leisure activities and have been refined into highly specialized competitive sports. The effort and ingenuity behind that evolution are remarkable.
Still, when I look at the faces and skin tones filling the screen, I cannot help but feel a lingering sense of unease.






