Boilermaker Rick wrote:
mrgoodkat wrote:
And they go up and down a field in Football between commercials.
Feel free to think that football sucks. I don't really care.
I'm tired of the commercials - but no, I love football. I'm simply saying it is in the eye of the beholder. I have family in Ireland that cannot stand to watch it because of the pace. Whatever. Eye of the beholder. Or maybe they haven't given it a chance...
Watch this below and tell me it isn't the epitome of why we watch humans we do not know personally, compete in sport. And keep in mind they are racing up a mountain that would strain a 4 cylinder engine.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GEqQW1-casMThe case in particular was a witch hunt. Why the intellectual giants at 1pm couldn't see this is beyond me. It wasnt even remotely fair. It never is. But this was amplified to extreme levels given the target. Armstrong simply knew he wouldn't win. That is how the authorities pay the game whether this or a federal criminal case. I mean there is no way that underpaid federal prosecutors are as good as the 93% conviction rate suggests. They stack the deck so much that they force plea bargains which still count towards convictions.
In this case it simply came in the form of having someone stop fighting the allegations. But this system in particular is stacked to absurd levels. The actual prosecutors set the rules.
Quote:
"You're up against a prosecutor who drafts the rules, and goes back and changes the rules when they go against him," says Michael Straubel, director of the sports law clinic at Valparaiso University Law School and a defense attorney who handed USADA one of its rare defeats in an arbitration case.
The Lance Armstrong case has inspired several such stealth rule changes.
Quote:
It's not that the case will be seen as a major victory for sports anti-doping authorities. It's that the anti-doping system claiming its highest-profile quarry ever is the most thoroughly one-sided and dishonest legal regime anywhere in the world this side of Beijing.
It's a system deliberately designed to place almost insurmountable hurdles in the way of athletes defending themselves or appealing adverse findings. Evidence has emerged over the years that laboratories certified by the World Anti-Doping Agency, or WADA, have been incompetent at analyzing athletes' samples or fabricated results when they didn't get the numbers they were hoping to see.
Athletes' defense attorneys harbored some hope that by picking a fight with Lance Armstrong, the anti-doping system might have sowed the seeds for its own reform. Finally, it was thought, here was an athlete with the money and motivation to expose the legal sophistry, the pseudoscience, the sheer sloppiness that underlies sports anti-doping prosecutions all over the world. Instead, the outcome shows that the system is so relentlessly rigged that even Lance Armstrong doesn't see a point in fighting it.
"We're talking about three, four, five years of litigation," says Mark Levinstein, a veteran sports lawyer and a member of Armstrong's legal team. "Who in his right mind would or could go through that?"
Before we go further, let's address the question most people think is the nub of the matter. Is Lance Armstrong a doper?
Here's the answer: I don't know. You don't know either. More to the point, Travis Tygart, head of the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, doesn't know. That hasn't kept USADA from declaring Armstrong to be guilty of charges it has not proved in public, or to attempt to strip him of his seven Tour de France titles. (It's not yet clear that USADA has the latter authority.)
And there lies what is, in fact, the nub of the matter. It shouldn't matter if you believe Armstrong doped in winning his titles. You should still be appalled, even frightened, by the character of the prosecution.
In part that's because under the rules written by the anti-doping system, athletes' cases are heard not in a court of law but in arbitration.
Arbitration is a system that more Americans are becoming familiar with, to their misfortune and distaste. It's where banks, brokerages, cellphone companies and other powerful business institutions force their customers to litigate grievances, for the simple reason that arbitration systems favor those who use them the most — banks, brokerages, cellphone companies, etc.
The real secret of why anti-doping agencies have been able to hound athletes out of their sports with impunity is that in this system they're not only the prosecutors but also the judges and juries. They write the arbitration rules, including those governing what evidence is relevant and under what circumstances it can be questioned.
Defending oneself in this system is horrifically expensive. The hiring of lawyers and scientific experts, the cost of visiting labs in foreign lands and attending hearings all over the country can drive a routine defense to six figures.
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-h ... k=lat-pick