Hello people,
Am I really the only one who thinks this new idea of immediate life bans might be a classical overreaction?
IMHO there is not so much wrong with the punishments already out there for people who use doping (two years for steroids the first time, lifelong ban for the second). Of course, you depend on the testing procedures catching new drugs, but that doesn't change anyway.
I think the effort should go into much more testing (especially out of competition), much faster publication of results and much more transparancy into punishments (and no, I am NOT talking about the US alone). Why not go that route first, because fleeing into higher punishments makes no sense otherwise anyway.
Regards, Wilmar
PS Some time ago somebody wrote that harsh punishments (like lifelong bans) were difficult to enforce in the US because of laws protecting people's right to make a living (or something like that). Will the lifelong ban by the USATF be enforcable in civil court?
Am I really the only one who thinks this new idea of immediate life bans might be a classical overreaction?
IMHO there is not so much wrong with the punishments already out there for people who use doping (two years for steroids the first time, lifelong ban for the second). Of course, you depend on the testing procedures catching new drugs, but that doesn't change anyway.
I think the effort should go into much more testing (especially out of competition), much faster publication of results and much more transparancy into punishments (and no, I am NOT talking about the US alone). Why not go that route first, because fleeing into higher punishments makes no sense otherwise anyway.
Regards, Wilmar
PS Some time ago somebody wrote that harsh punishments (like lifelong bans) were difficult to enforce in the US because of laws protecting people's right to make a living (or something like that). Will the lifelong ban by the USATF be enforcable in civil court?
Comment