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HEROICS will be performed this July. The Tour de France lasts 21 days, covers 3600 kilometres and includes 25 lung-busting climbs in the Alps and Pyrenees. Each extraordinary performance in the race will, however, generate suspicion as well as admiration. Allegations of doping have plagued the Tour for so long that any rider who excels now inevitably attracts talk of drug use.
But what if a superhuman performance itself could be used as evidence of doping? That's the thinking behind a new strategy, which asks: "Is this physiologically possible without the aid of drugs?"
The idea is straightforward: work out the boundaries of human ability, based on what we know about physiology and its maximal capabilities. If an athlete's performance lies outside this limit, they are highlighted as a potential drug-taker and given more frequent and extensive drug screenings.
Whats so bad about Super human performance? Why not make them faster, stronger, better. And see how far we can push the limits?
Originally posted by belial259
Sometimes I wish they'd just drop the rules altogether.
Let the athlete augment themselves however they wish.
Whats so bad about Super human performance? Why not make them faster, stronger, better. And see how far we can push the limits?
How many accounts do you have?
Maybe...maybe not.
Originally posted by CHA0S
reply to post by Milleresque
I don't concur...steroids can damage your body beyond repair, and it will with long term use...the reason it's unfair, is because some people don't want to risk damaging their bodies, they want to test what they were naturally capable of and push themselves to the limit without the aid of drugs or anything else. Once you introduce drugs, it then becomes a competition of who is taking more drugs.
But in relation to the opening post, I do not agree at all with putting limits on what we are physically capable of...athletes will tell you the right frame of mind is the number one key to unlocking your potential...you have to know you can succeed, and have the determination to make it a reality...there is no limit on what we are physically capable of, the only limit is in your head...
How many account do you have?
Maybe...maybe not.
I'd bet you the super-athlete on drugs Always beats the super-athlete who thinks positive thoughts. ; )
[edit on 1/7/10 by CHA0S]
Originally posted by belial259
Sometimes I wish they'd just drop the rules altogether.
Let the athlete augment themselves however they wish.
Originally posted by jokei
As for ethics etc being a construct of man, fair point, but then so is competition
Originally posted by belial259
I don't think it is. Everything is competition. The strong live the weak die. That is the way of things.
That is the only universal truth there really is.
Other life forms compete. They find ways to adapt and survive and find mates and food sources etc. They have no rules. No ethics. No morals.
Originally posted by Exuberant1
By applying your silly logic it sounds like you wouldn't mind if the competitors started killing and wounding each other.
ROME — In an effort to clean up its sport, the international governing body of swimming will require its athletes to show more skin. By an overwhelming vote Friday at its general congress, FINA officials decided to ban the high-tech swimsuits that have been likened to doping on a hanger. The ban does not start until 2010, but the polyurethane-based swimsuit era that the swimwear giant Speedo introduced in the lead-up to last year’s Beijing Olympics will effectively be ushered out, presumably with a bang, at the swimming world championships that start here Sunday.
PARIS (AFP) — South African paralympic champion Oscar Pistorius has been told he cannot compete in the Beijing Olympics because the artificial legs he uses give him an unfair advantage. The decision to ban the 21-year-old sprinter from all competitions involving able-bodied athletes was announced by the sport's governing body, the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) on Monday. Pistorius, who as an 11-month-old baby had both of his legs amputated below the knee due to a congenital disorder, runs on specially adapted carbon fibre blades that have seen him win paralympic titles and challenge the times set by top-level able-bodied athletes. But a scientific investigation into his springy prosthetics carried out by the Institute of Biomechanics at Cologne University last November found that they gave him a clear competitive edge over such athletes.
Originally posted by belial259
Originally posted by jokei
As for ethics etc being a construct of man, fair point, but then so is competition
Are you sure?
I don't think it is. Everything is competition. The strong live the weak die. That is the way of things.
That is the only universal truth there really is.
Other life forms compete. They find ways to adapt and survive and find mates and food sources etc. They have no rules. No ethics. No morals.
Originally posted by belial259
I've often said the Olympics needed a 5 man special forces live fire death match event.
But maybe I've watched too much Running Man.
Originally posted by belial259
I've often said the Olympics needed a 5 man special forces live fire death match event.
But maybe I've watched too much Running Man.
Originally posted by belial259
Sometimes I wish they'd just drop the rules altogether.
Let the athlete augment themselves however they wish.
Whats so bad about Super human performance? Why not make them faster, stronger, better. And see how far we can push the limits?
But in relation to the opening post, I do not agree at all with putting limits on what we are physically capable of...athletes will tell you the right frame of mind is the number one key to unlocking your potential...