Since I think heroin and crack should be legal as well, that argument doesn't have as much of an impact as you might have expected it to. A society that happily legalizes tobacco (which causes more deaths than all illegal drugs combined) has no business griping about anything else people choose to put into their bodies.BigJim said:Hardly anyone who takes 'roids does so in total medical knowledge of how they fuck up your body and brain if abused. I don't think they should be legal any more than heoin or crack.
If people aren't informed about the medical effects of steroids then it's almost certainly because they bought off the black market, without a doctor's advice, specifically because doctors can't prescribe them legally. In other words the fact that they're banned creates that problem rather than the reverse. Regardless, anyone who takes any drug without learning what it might do to them and how to minimize their risks is being stupid. I don't think the law exists to prevent people from being stupid. And if they know the risks and do it anyway then that's their business. Either way the law has no rightful place in their personal decisions.
Lesnar was quite something, wasn't he? I'll never forget watching him blow that shooting star press in his match with Kurt Angle. I fully expected to see him laying on the mat with a broken neck after that landing, and if he hadn't borrowed his neck from a water buffalo, I would have.We all know that wrestling has scripts and a storyline, but that isn't the point. It's as competetive as anything and more competetive than most. Being the "best man" is a result of years of hard work, except in extremely exceptional cases like Brock Lesnar, who is to wrestling what the Pistol Star is to astronomy.
But I digress. No, the fact that wrestling is scripted is exactly and entirely the point. Look, the only reason to talk about "cheating" is if you're violating an implied or explicit contract with someone. There are only two groups of people with whom any athlete could have such a contract: the fans and his fellow athletes. In most sports there is definitely a contract with the fans, who pay to see unenhanced athletes in straightforward competition. Steroids are rightly seen as violating the contract with those fans, and are rightly banned in those sports.
In professional wrestling the contract is different. There, steroids give the fans more of what they're paying to see, not less. So that leaves only the wrestlers' implicit contracts with one another. So let's look at those.
First and foremost, wrestlers contract to take care of each other in the ring, to help each other avoid injuries to the greatest extent they can. Steroids only help with this, by making wrestlers stronger and faster.
Wrestlers do NOT contract with each other to rein in their competition for fan attention. And you're right, steroids help them get more of that. Then again, so do acting classes. So do custom wardrobes. So does gymnastics training. All of these are simply things that any wrestler can pay for if he feels it would help his career. None of them need to be banned.
So I don't see that steroid use violates any contract with either the fans or other wrestlers. It is "cheating" only in the most technical sense that the WWE was forced by government pressure to make rules against it.



