Team Orders are race fixing. Simple as.
Nuhuh - not according to the FIA.
The FIA can bite me, race fixing is where you manipulate the outcome. That's exactly what team orders are, by definition.
Trying to win is manipulating the outcome, is that race fixing also?
A soccer player passing the ball to his team-mate in a better position to score - he's trying to manipulate the outcome, is that game fixing?
A coach or manager praising players for passing and assisting other team mates to score - is that also match fixing?






So when Lewis won the WDC.................WHAT DID HEIKI GET??????????? teammates my a@@! You do know there are 2 sides of the garage
??????
Just like in MotoGP where teammates race e/o all the time 
As for your soccer analogy 

Everyone lifts the trophy and get a medal!!!!!!!!
Have any of you seen WEB celebrating Sebs WDC???Just for the sake of being teammates 
As I said
in this post, I believe it is a generational thing. What the newer followers of F1 in some areas do is follow a driver. Way back when I started following F1 the focus was far more concentrated on the team.
If you watch a movie called "Le Mans" with Steve McQueen, it wasn't that great a movie, but, at the time, it was good because it used real Le Mans footage mixed into the story. I recall, just like at F1 races at the time, they would rarely call a drivers name. they would call it "the number 2 Porsche" or "the leading Ferrari". Watch the movie and you'll get an idea of what I mean.
Sure, you can get people who are disappointed in their performance in a winning or loosing team, but, IMO, everyone that is part of a team eventually feels happiest that their team wins. Your analogy about Webbo feeling down and not celebrating like Seb at the end of last year - I can understand your point, but, if it weren't a team sport then it's just Seb who should have been celebrating - but clearly the whole team was celebrating. And that's is why it is still a team sport.
I think Jenson is a very clever driver and he uses this to enforce his position in the team after a less than stellar end of last year.