amateur wrote:
pariah wrote:
What is real?
I'll tell you what's real. The human body is amazing. Didn't you know that? I'm sure you did, but you keep forgetting. That is the basis of doping psychology, people lose sight of the amazing ability of a healthy body to do amazing things and get sucked into a void of drug delusion that it can be better. It's a fantasy. Why is boozing culture so pervasive and persuasive. Go on tell me why? What's wrong with just having a good time without alchohol? How many drug testers can do that?
The problem with drug testing and anti doping rhetoric is that it sends out exactly the wrong message, it makes doping look more desirable. Simple psychology that should be obvious. But such holier thou rhetoric works most of the time. People shout amen at the preacher en masse.
I have some sympathy with what you are saying up to a point. The point at which some athletics do successfully cheat. Although who's to say what they could have achieved without the drugs? It wouldn't be far-fetched to suggest that some athletes might have a righteous psychological need to compete clean, others not so much. Certainly most of humanity has a pathological belief in magic pills.
One more thing before I leave this thread alone. rekrunner has just touched on this. This is
going to come as a shock to some of you so brace yourselves but aside from drugs and genetics
it's possible, just possible that Africans are better at, wait for it, ... running.
Okay thanks. An intelligent reply on an emotive subject.
Are the Africans better at running? Well most of them are actually lousy runners, but there are so many good ones. But to answer your question with another question, do non African distance runners who are phsyically larger need to lose a little muscle mass to compete at the same level? And is that what elite cyclists have to do to win the Tour de France? In other words increase mass specific force over long distances? This is a question I have been pondering for many years.