White_Savage
Mentor
The recent downfall of Marion Jones got me thinking.
My first reaction was to wonder how the hell anyone could look at a woman with the body of a Marvel Comics action figure (A male character, mind you, Spidey is a good match for Jones' physique) and NOT know she was doping.
BTW, to further illustrate how pervasive PED use is at all levels, I ran into a 20 year old Black guy who plays for the local Junior college's basketball team. He had a truly grisly case of acne. For those of you who don't remember when athletes weren't as drugged as beef cattle, grown, beard sporting men aren't normally adorned with the zits of a second puberty.
My second assesment was, "Well, she's screwed now, but if she had never won, she'd never have been anything."
And that is really true. If you do, or don't take PEDs and loose, you're a looser, period and no one really cares whether or not you doped.
If you win and get away with it, world is your oyster. Get caught later like Jones...well, at least you were something for awhile.
When you consider, it's easy to see why it's practically certain most of the people in the winner's circle will be doping most of the time.
There is only so much officials can do to insure fairness. Sure, you can make sure a boxer doesn't have loaded gloves when he steps in the ring, etc., but with the ingenuity of the PED chemists at work, staying ahead of the dopers in sports seems like a loosing battle.
I don't like the turn the PED witch hunt has taken either. I HATE Barry Bonds as a person, but this totalitarian practice of calling citizens on the carpet, prying into their most personal, none-of-thy-business affairs, and then indicting them for perjury if they aren't absolutely honest is FRIGHTENING. So are the bullying tactics of John McCain, that 1st Amendment and MMA-hating hemorhoid who apparently thinks Congress has the right to define the rules of Major League Baseball
My conclusion there is perhaps one, and only one way to level the playing field, especially for those athletes who may have a genetic tendency to be more anxious and less willing to break the rules. That way is to simply quit trying to stop them from doing what we know they are most all doing anyway.Edited by: White_Savage
My first reaction was to wonder how the hell anyone could look at a woman with the body of a Marvel Comics action figure (A male character, mind you, Spidey is a good match for Jones' physique) and NOT know she was doping.
BTW, to further illustrate how pervasive PED use is at all levels, I ran into a 20 year old Black guy who plays for the local Junior college's basketball team. He had a truly grisly case of acne. For those of you who don't remember when athletes weren't as drugged as beef cattle, grown, beard sporting men aren't normally adorned with the zits of a second puberty.
My second assesment was, "Well, she's screwed now, but if she had never won, she'd never have been anything."
And that is really true. If you do, or don't take PEDs and loose, you're a looser, period and no one really cares whether or not you doped.
If you win and get away with it, world is your oyster. Get caught later like Jones...well, at least you were something for awhile.
When you consider, it's easy to see why it's practically certain most of the people in the winner's circle will be doping most of the time.
There is only so much officials can do to insure fairness. Sure, you can make sure a boxer doesn't have loaded gloves when he steps in the ring, etc., but with the ingenuity of the PED chemists at work, staying ahead of the dopers in sports seems like a loosing battle.
I don't like the turn the PED witch hunt has taken either. I HATE Barry Bonds as a person, but this totalitarian practice of calling citizens on the carpet, prying into their most personal, none-of-thy-business affairs, and then indicting them for perjury if they aren't absolutely honest is FRIGHTENING. So are the bullying tactics of John McCain, that 1st Amendment and MMA-hating hemorhoid who apparently thinks Congress has the right to define the rules of Major League Baseball
My conclusion there is perhaps one, and only one way to level the playing field, especially for those athletes who may have a genetic tendency to be more anxious and less willing to break the rules. That way is to simply quit trying to stop them from doing what we know they are most all doing anyway.Edited by: White_Savage