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Legalise Drugs in Sport
Category: SportDrugs in Sport? A controversial issue at any time and with the Olympics just around the corner it is sure to rear its ugly head again, and again, and again. myLot User Profile
I wonder if it is really worth the fuss. Athletes, more to the point, drug manufacturers are constantly finding ways to and drug types that can enhance the performance of athletes while beating the drug tests. It would not surprise me to learn that these same drug companies are then developing the testing procedures to discover these drugs - talk about perpetual funding. I would love to own a business like that - earn an income by creating a problem then double that by delivering a solution - wow - cash flow.
The reality is that where money is involved, prestige and public status, people will try to beat the system. The only way to resolve the issue is to stop fighting. Athletes are always going to try and find a better way to perform. The human body is capable of doing so much naturally - drugs are one of the only options available that enable an athlete to push their bodies beyond what it has been designed to do. If we remove the bans on performance enhancing drugs then perhaps we can at least ensure that the drugs themselves do minimal harm.
Even the professional in sport are now starting to come out either in favor of legalizing, or they are at least admitting that winning this battle (substance bans) is a lost cause. Don Talbot, one of Australia’s former leading swim coaches now believes that legalising may be the only solution. You can see his opinions here - http://www.abc.net.au/canberra/stories/s2060567.htm?backyard.
John Fahey, the new president of the World Anti-Doping Authority (WADA) believes that winning the battle is not possible - see his article here - http://abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/10/17/2062092.htm.
The problem with banning performance enhancing drugs is that it is not only the drug itself that is banned - in fact there are really only a handful of drugs that are banned. It is the drugs used to hide the performance enhancing drugs that are also banned that lead to problems. Drugs commonly used for pain relief, contraception, weight control (eg diruetics), epilepsy and even coffee (caffeine in higher than normal doses) are also banned. In fact, some chemicals found naturally in the human body are also banned. One of the common problems some male athletes experience is that of raised testosterone levels - these levels may raised naturally or as the result of illness, over training, injury, sexual activity and many other factors. However these raised levels often lead to problems when it comes to ‘dope testing’.
Athletes have in the past been banned from sport due to high levels of caffeine - because they drank that third or fourth cup of coffee in the morning, pain relief medication - because they had suffered severe pain such as a migraine in the days leading up to competition or testing, or because they had used diuretics to help control weight. It should be noted that none of these drugs are on the banned list because they enhance an athletes abilities. No, they are on the list because they could be used to mask the performance enhancing drug.
I say enough is enough. It is the athletes body. Let them do what they want with it. Do people really care whether the winner is on drugs or not? The answer is yes - but only because of the scandal or because they feel the person that finished second or third should have won. Athletes that have been caught out in the past have been happy enough to give back their medals - you never see them offering to give back the money have made - so really - its not so much the sport these days - its that holiest of holly grails - the DOLLAR.









They aren’t happy to give back the medals, and while they’re not giving back the money, they’re losing their entire careers.