Obviously some of you are incapable of reading. Beshad started this thread by stating that we all know some of you just don't get football and that if that is the case there is no reason for you to be in here.
Football (sorry, soccer) is played, watched and supported by more people worldwide than any other sport - by several orders of magnitude. There is no way that would be true if it was as boring as you suggest. Just because you don't understand the subtleties or appreciate the skill involved at the top level doesn't mean those qualities aren't there or aren't appreciated by those who do follow the sport.
I don't 'get' basketball, where points are scored every ten seconds or so - where's the excitement in that, where it's a bigger deal if you miss a shot than if you score points? I don't 'get' American Football, where you stop for an ad breat every five minutes and the ball is never in play for more than 10 seconds at a time. However, with millions of avid supporters I appreciate that there must be more to those sports than I can see at a casual viewing.
This World Cup is hugely significant for all sorts of reasons worldwide, beyond the sport itself. It is probably the most significant event in South Africa (and possibly in the whole continent) since Nelson Mandela was released, and will have a far reaching and long term impact of all the people in that country.
On the football front, it promises to be one of the most open and exciting competitions in World Cup history. Don't read anything into the opening few matches, as they are nearly always close, cagey matches. The real excitement starts as we approach the knockout stages.
I think the USA have a great chance of progressing from the group stages this time and fully expect them to do so, alongside England in their group. Then it becomes a pure knockout where any team is capable of beating any other team on any given day. One of the beauties of a game with few goals is that each goal becomes hugely important and it means that even the minnows have a chance of upsetting the odds and beating the big teams ocassionally. That unpredictability is part of the drama.