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Is It Time to Say Yes to Steroids in Professional Sports?

Pushtoday

MuscleChemistry Registered Member
by: Raymmar Tirado
"Alex Rodriguez admits to steroid use."
Yet another major headline from the professional sporting world. Yet another news cycle spent talking about the use of performance enhancing drugs instead of the real issues that ail our country. But let's be honest. Do we really even care anymore?
After all, we are talking about the business of entertaining masses? The "purity of sport" argument has long since passed (at least in the professional arena) and now, all we are left with are large corporate machines that only care about selling tickets, driving advertising revenue, and presenting the allure of exclusivity.
Sure the athletes need training and talent, but if a technology exists that can make you better at what you do, then why wouldn't you use it?
If your goal is to be the strongest, fastest, most home run hitting dude in the world then why wouldn't you find every tool known to man to make that a reality.
After all, the steroids didn't make him a great ball player, they just amplified the skills he already had. I could take all the steroids in the world but if you put me at the plate and throw me a 90mph fast ball, the only thing I'm going to do is get the hell out of the way.
These athletes already have such an advantage in training, equipment, medical care, etc that the concept of restricting their access to a performance enhancing drug is like telling a diabetic that they can use insulin but not the pump that automatically regulates its flow into the body.
We let these athletes use injections to limit swelling and speed up the recovery process, even in the middle of a game. They study themselves in labs to focus on heart rates, breathing, and perfecting their techniques. Peak performance is presented as the only acceptable outcome and then we have the audacity to get mad when someone finds a shortcut to better performance.
How hypocritical of all of us. Which among you is not looking for an advantage to do better in this game called life right now? We have become a society of cheaters, and as much as we want to pretend that we're all goody two-shoes and living a perfect life, we are all guilty of looking for shortcuts at one point or another. We actually glorify it in business, politics and education, but god forbid we see it in sports.
In a world where genetic modification is on its way to becoming the norm, are we really going to sit and scream at the TV because a guy gave into the temptation to do everything possible to become the god that we all propped him up to be?
At the very least, we should be willing to be honest with ourselves about the hypocrisy of all of it.
Imagine if we told Hollywood actors that they were no longer allowed to be in another movie if they have had undergone plastic surgery. Or what if we told all the magazine publishers that they are no longer allowed to Photoshop the images that they use inside of their publications.
Maybe next we'll try to tell college kids who take Adderall that their test scores are invalid or tell the pregnant mother that she has to suffer through the pain of child birth because the epidural would artificially dull the pain. I know, let's tell the banks that they can no longer lend money to anyone who doesn't already have the same amount sitting in the bank as collateral. That way no one can gain an unfair financial advantage in the world.
It would be absurd to present any of these arguments on a massive scale and you might even get laughed off the map for doing so, but every one of these things is an artificial enhancement to our ability to perform. Not all narcotics but each of them important drugs on which our society is wholly dependent.
We love drugs. Especially the ones we're not allowed to have.
We love the erotic drugs of pornography and hedonism, and we spend more money on legal drugs (coffee, cigarettes and prescriptions etc.) than any other country on the planet. We have statewide battles to legalize drugs from plants that grow naturally all around us and everywhere you look, people are gorging on something that is intended to either make them perform better or at the very least, feel better about themselves.
We live in a world where superficial is really all that matters to most of us, so why should we get upset when someone skirts the system to bring the best version of themselves to the surface?
Aren't we all addicts of something? Whether it's technology, relationships, food, alcohol, or any of the other things we rely on to distract us from ourselves. We love it when our performance is enhanced. We love things that make us faster and allow us to do more with less.
Isn't that the holy grail of life? Business? To gain a competitive advantage? To find something to set yourself apart from everyone else? Something that makes you better, more appealing and ultimately gives you some level of power over others.
Why then do we all pretend to be so outraged when we find out that one of our heroes is just like us? That he too is human and that in spite of everything we made him out to be, he turned out to be just another man.
Is it that we are disappointed to find out that even our heroes are fallible?
Are we incapable of admitting to ourselves that when we turn on the TV to watch a professional sporting event, we are tuning into the modern day version of the Roman Coliseum? Are we scared to admit that we have an unhealthy dependence on this drug called entertainment?
Furthermore, if we're going to keep living with this societal addiction, then why not give in and let it be the best of all addictions? Why not lift the ban and watch someone hit a 700 foot home run? Why not let them run faster, jump higher, hit each other harder and score more points? Wouldn't that be ultimately more entertaining?
So I say go ahead, show me your surgically modified, genetically altered, steroid injected, best version of yourself. Why not hide the portions of you that are real and only show the world the parts that you make perfect for public consumption. After all, it seems the cool kids are already doing it.
And if we're all going to pretend to be better than we actually are, then why shouldn't everyone else have the same opportunity? Even a professional athlete.



(Huffington Post)
 
I am going to copy this thread to the articles forum, and change the title so its not a duplicate when being indexed. Great find push today!
 
Just one big problem with that. How about those athletes that choose not to take these drugs? They would be at a permanent disadvantage to those who take the drugs. Is this fair? Anyway it is all just fantasy because the Congress will probably never change these laws. There is too much bad public opinion about anabolic steroids. And the Congress goes mostly by public opinion.
 
well I've said it before, if its illegal to juice, then yes its unfair to do so while others choose not to break the rules, however if it was legalized, then i have no problem with them juicing even if some choose not to, as thats their choice! But yeah as it stands now, its an unfair advantage in professional sports, but I'm all for letting them all juice legally!
 
Only problem I see is the public's view. Juicing gets a bad rap to the public "non-juicers." Most people look at current day bodybuilders and just shake their heads... they don't think about how hard it is to get that big, they just see them using steroids and thinking THAT'S how it's done... Look at how it's viewed with sports nowadays, too. If you juice and get caught, you're shunned and stripped of all respect. I don't see that changing, unfortunately.
 
Only problem I see is the public's view. Juicing gets a bad rap to the public "non-juicers." Most people look at current day bodybuilders and just shake their heads... they don't think about how hard it is to get that big, they just see them using steroids and thinking THAT'S how it's done... Look at how it's viewed with sports nowadays, too. If you juice and get caught, you're shunned and stripped of all respect. I don't see that changing, unfortunately.

yeah its pretty bad, but i think most people don't give a fuck one way or another, but they're the SILENT MAJORITY, as i think the vocal ones are in the minority, problem is they just have a platform to shout from as they're broadcasters who were always picked last in school to play, if picked at all lol, and now they're on their high horses!

But i honestly think most people don't give a fuck, and I say that from my personal experience in looking like i juice, yeah some people i can tell right away think I'm a cheater or i get the rolled eyes or comments under their breaths, but for the most part, people don't care, or they wanna talk to me and engage in conversation with me,

but yeah steroids are so taboo in pro sports now its sad
 
I don't think people realize how many athletes are already doing it... It's silly to me when people say somebody like Dwight Howard blew up the way he did naturally from when he was in high school/college... I looked at the before/after picture once and immediately thought "juice." People see "juicing" as the bodybuilders.. i.e. fucking HUGE/jacked people... obviously that isn't necessarily the case with everybody depending on dosage and the type of steroid used. I may be crazy but I'd honestly be surprised if half of the athletes out there haven't cycled at least once or twice at LEAST, or taken some other "performance enhancer" to increase their athleticism.
 
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