We were talking about steroid use on the part of professional wrestlers, no?BigJim said:I wasn’t aware we were doing anything else. Scanning back I see I don’t mention the word “professional”, but I didn’t have any other kind of athlete in mind at the time (assuming that amateurs just don’t put in the same amount of manhours and don't take the same level of risk).
Yep, that's how laws are made - including laws against steroid use. Doesn't seem like a system you'd want to defend though.That’s never been the way it’s been done in anything but politics. Politicians and farting lawyers make the rules, in consultation.
In theory, those laws are passed because you and I want them. If you're saying that you DO want them, then yes, you are saying that you should be making such decisions for athletes through the proxy of your elected representative.I never said I should have any say in it. Not me personally. Parliament and, in your case, Congress make the laws.
And if athletes were allowed to use steroids legally, then their use would likewise be done under experienced medical supervision to minimize risk. "Nanny laws" like this nearly always cause the problems they're claimed to solve.Foley: Every risk he took was as controlled as it's possible for a stunt fall to be. They were done with people who carried decades of experience each and centuries between them.
Regardless, the risk (controllable or not, predictable or not) should be up to the athletes.
Please, you know the cases aren't parallel. Even athletes who don't use drugs do not feel compelled to turn in those who do. If a majority of athletes really opposed drug use then it would be simple for them to rid their sports of the minority who feel otherwise. A simple phone call would do. But they don't. Ergo they must not care about as much as you think they do, or those who do care are greatly in the minority.Evidently career burglars must hate the idea of laws declaring their profession illegal. Best we scrap them immediately. All the fault of the fuckwit householders for not fitting alarms and owning a .44 magnum or a SPAZ if they get robbed.
In other words the rules should be adjusted to favor the most risk-averse. Sorry, I don't consider that especially sane.The professional athletes taking the risks come what may, I don’t give a fuck about. I’m keen for the laws to protect the interests of gifted sportsmen and women who are world class professionals, yet care enough about more than their sport to want to preserve their bodies for their well earned retirements. In the eyes of any sane individual it would only be fair to them for steroids and their like to remain banned.
As I said it works either way. If the Rock took his risks in the form of steroids instead of Mick Foley's crazy stunts, then it balances out. If he got his competitive edge without such risks, then those who do risk steroids aren't competing unfairly. Either way, steroids are not a problem in professional wrestling.I do know that it's possible to have a bigger physique than Dwayne Jonhson's without taking steroids. Granted you'd have to be a seriously sad fucker with no other passtime, but it's possible.



