jikugki wrote:
Aghast wrote:Vaughters agrees with you.
"They [professional athletes] must know, without doubt, that they will have a fair chance by racing clean. And for them to do that, the rules must be enforced, and the painful effort to make that happen must be unending and ruthless. Antidoping enforcement is 1,000 percent better than in my era of competition, and that brings me great satisfaction. But we must support these efforts even more.
Almost every athlete I’ve met who has doped will say they did it only because they wanted a level playing field. That says something: everyone wants a fair chance, not more. So, let’s give our young athletes a level playing field, without doping. Let’s put our effort and resources into making sport fair, so that no athlete faces this decision ever again. We put so much emotion into marketing and idolizing athletes, let’s put that same zeal into giving them what they really want: the ability to live their dreams without compromising their morals. "
That's fine except for the part where he says athletes need to be given the ability to live their dreams without compromising their morals. They already have that ability. No one can give it to them except for themselves. Stop being weak. Take responsibility for your decisions.
That's fine except when most of the peloton is doping, and the team doctor says it's ok you won't test postive, and the management turn a blind eye etc etc etc.
The culture of doping is what needs to be adressed, not just individual choice.