http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-18451131
Lance Armstrong case: Can doping be permitted in sport?
Seven-time
Tour de France-winning cyclist Lance Armstrong and three doctors have
been charged in a doping scandal. If doping is as widespread in sport as
it seems, is it time to look for a way to permit it?
Armstrong has denied the charge that he used banned
substances and medical techniques to increase the amount of
oxygen-bearing red blood cells in his body. But he has already been
barred from competing in triathlons, and could be stripped of his
cycling awards.Whatever the outcome, Armstrong's case, as well as other athletes' testimony, previous criminal cases and media accounts show that doping and performance enhancing drugs pervade the highest levels of sport across the world.
The current "war on drugs"-style anti-doping climate has done virtually nothing to curb use of illicit substances, critics say.
"This is not a prescription for drug-free sport," says John Hoberman, a historian at the University of Texas who has written extensively about doping in sport.
"The activity itself has become pharma-dependent. And the idea that the best-intentioned people at the World Anti-doping Agency are going to make this go away is a dream."
Famous alleged "dopers"
- Cyclist and one-time Armstrong teammate Floyd Landis was stripped of his 2006 Tour de France title after testing positive for a banned substance
- Stars of baseball's "steroid era" of the 1990s, including Barry Bonds, Jose Canseco, Rafael Palmeiro, Ken Caminiti, Mark McGwire, and many others have been implicated in the steroid scandal
- US Olympic medallist Marion Jones admitted in 2007 she had taken steroids ahead of the 2000 Sydney games
- Canadian medallist Ben Johnson was stripped of his 1988 100m title after testing positive for steroids
- American football player Lyle Alzado, one of the first professional athletes to admit steroid use, died in 1992 of brain cancer at 43
Anti-doping rules and testing may
not have driven drugs from sport. But they do encourage false-positive
results, stigmatise the "bad apple" athletes who are caught, and tilt
the playing field toward the best-financed athletes and teams that can
afford the best doctors, critics say.
Norman Fost
Doctor and bioethicist
The anti-doping climate creates a lucrative market for skilled doping doctors who can help high-level athletes avoid detection.
"There will always be a market for the smart doctor, and the
harder on drugs you become the more the smart doctor will gain," says
Verner Moller, professor of sport and body culture at Aarhus University
in Denmark."His market value will improve with the improvement of the anti-doping system. The harder it is to beat the doping system, the more interest there will be in the ability to circumvent this."
Doping testing encourages athletes and their medical teams to experiment with drugs that are untried or unauthorised for use on humans, and to buy drugs where their manufacture is not subject to regulatory oversight, critics say.
"We are living in a world that is constantly developing new and efficient doping," says Moller.
Some critics of the anti-doping culture say it's morally arbitrary to allow training at high altitude, permit ultra-high tech uniforms, specially engineered diet, and medical treatments such as anti-inflammatory drugs, while banning some pharmaceuticals on a list.
"They're virtually all unnatural means to enhance performance," says Norman Fost, professor of paediatrics, medical history and bioethics at the University of Wisconsin.
"The notion that something is perverse or immoral to enhance performance is bizarre. I could list for you 50 things athletes do to enhance their natural ability."
Moller of Aarhus University in Denmark recommends ending the current drug testing regime and replacing it with a system in which sport bodies set an upper threshold for blood levels of hormone or of red blood cells.
Under his proposal, any athlete whose, say, testosterone ratios are suspiciously out of whack, or who has an unacceptably high concentration of red blood cells, would be temporarily suspended from competition for the sake of his health. But the athlete would not be tarred as a doper or otherwise penalised.
"You would have a level playing field," Moller says. "Everybody would know what they can do, and it will be less important who has the best doping doctor. You would also see that we would get rid of those false positives, the bad publicity, the doping hysteria."
Or, performance enhancing drugs that are currently banned could instead be regulated by medical authorities like the US Food and Drug Administration, with their use vigilantly monitored by medical personnel and sport authorities, proposes Fost.
"We should have it done on the table instead of under the table," he says. "Stop the criminalisation."
The United Nations and 190 countries agree that anti-doping measures are crucial to protecting athletes and fairness in sporting, and the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) vigorously opposes measures to weaken them.
"You're putting people health at risk," says Gary Wadler, former chairman of the World Anti-Doping Agency's prohibited list committee. "You're telling people cheating is OK."
However, the only way to end doping in sport for good is to reduce the incentive to cheat, says Hoberman of the University of Texas, "to literally reform high performance sport into a less compulsive and competitive activity."
"The current model has been corrupted," he says.
Maybe it's not really connected with this article but this reminded me of our classes concerning business and ethics. ;-)
ReplyDeleteTake a look: http://d24w6bsrhbeh9d.cloudfront.net/photo/arvjGM7_700b.jpg
Hello everyone,
ReplyDeleteI compiled all the questions except Business and Finance ( and created my own about Ethics). Take a look at them.
Politics and society
1. Is election a sign of democracy or is it an oppressive tool? Justify your choice.
2. How is the president elected in the US?
3. What is bipartisanship and how does it relate to American politics?
4. What are some of the arguments presented in favor of the legalization of marijuana?
5. Discuss some of the protest movements and root causes for the protests seen around the world in the last two years.
6. Discuss some of the different protest movements and similarities between them.
7. What are the some of the causes of mass murders and how should we punish the mass murderers?
8. What was the Maple Spring and how was it different than movements such as Occupy Wall Street?
9. Why did the Maple Spring movement develop and why can it be viewed as more successful than other protest movements.
10. What is neoliberalism and what part has it played in the protest movements?
11. Is there a relationship between the social contract and protest movements such as Occupy Wall Street?
Relationships
1. What is your perspective on polyamorous relationships? Can you imagine being a part of such a relationship?
2. Are polyamorous relationships beneficial for children?/How do polyamorous relationships affect children? Should polyamorous families have the right to raise children?
3. Are polyamorous people smarter?
4. What are the alternatives to monogamy? Is polyamory the kind of human relationships through which we can achieve happiness?
5. Is monogamy natural?
6. Why do some women begin relations with locked up men?
7. Discuss the role of pen pals of prisoners- What role pen pals play in the resocialization process?
8. How have technological devices changed the way we communicate?
9. Is it possible to be truly alone in a technology driven society?
10. What are the benefits of being disconnected?
11. Can technology be a true substitute for face-to-face interaction?
12. Can we compare technology dependency to an addiction?
Lifestyle
Consumerism
1. Discuss some of the most prevalent methods used by advertiser and media to influence our behavior?
2.Do things and money bring us happiness? If not what do?
3.Can consumerism be seen as a method of social control?
4.How does consumerism affect children?
5.What impact does consumerism have on holiday?
Feminism:
6.What should feminists be fighting for or against nowadays?
7.Why do you think the term ‘feminist’ has negative connotation? OR Why do you think being labeled as feminist has negative meaning?
8.Why are most feminists extremists?
9.What are some of the means feminists use to attract attention? Justify their choice.
(Are men and women equal in 21st century society and is equality possible?)
Tourism and travel
1. Is the urge to travel genetic?
2. Describe the influence of technology on traveling.
3. How do cameras affect our travel experience?
4. Discuss couch-surfing. Would you participate in it?
5. Why is extreme tourism growing in popularity?
6. Which disaster sites (if any) would you be interested in seeing? Why?
7. How does tourism affect people's traditions and customs?
8. Is it ethical to travel to war affected areas?
Technology
ReplyDelete1.What is hacktivism? What are some methods of hacktivism?
2.Do you agree/disagree with hacktivists' actions?
3.Do you know any controversial cases involving hacktivism?
4.Should information be completely free?
5.How technology can be used to improve/alternate our bodies?
6.Would you ever consider putting implants in your body (if yes, what kind of implants)?
7.Discuss pros and cons of smartphones.
8.In what ways can smartphones improve our lives?
Media and journalism
1.What impact does a president have on manipulating media content? How and why he does it?
2.What impact does technology have on journalism?
3.What are the core components of creating a successful Internet/ YouTube video?
4.What is the correlation between fear and consumerism?
5.Does fear evoked by TV news stimulate people’s urge to buy? (4 or 5)
6. Can we trust the media?
Ethics
1. Explain the term “moral hazard”. When does it occur and what are the consequences of it?
2.Why is it so difficult or even impossible to send banks and huge corporations to prison?
3.How do we distinguish between right and wrong? What are the sources of ethical behavior?
4.Recent research suggested the wealthy are less ethical, why could this be so? Give examples of the unethical behaviors of the rich.
5.Can performance-enhancing drugs/ doping be permitted in sport? Why/Why not?
6.What side effects can performance-enhancing drugs cause?
Here I've chosen 5 questions per each topic which in my estimation are the best ones. Take a look at these questions, please and let me know your opinions about my choices. Any comments or suggestions are welcome. If you agree with my choices subscribe to the final list and write "the list is ok".
ReplyDeletePolitics and society
1. Is election a sign of democracy or is it an oppressive tool? Justify your choice.
2. What are some of the arguments presented in favor of the legalization of marijuana?
3. Discuss some of the protest movements and root causes for the protests seen around the world in the last two years.
4. What are the some of the causes of mass murders and how should we punish the mass murderers?
5. Why did the Maple Spring movement develop and why can it be viewed as more successful than other protest movements.
Relationships
1. What is your perspective on polyamorous relationships? Can you imagine being a part of such a relationship?
2. How do polyamorous relationships affect children? Should polyamorous families have the right to raise children?
3. Is monogamy natural?
4. Why do some women begin relations with locked up men?
5. How have technological devices changed the way we communicate?
Lifestyle
Consumerism
1. Discuss some of the most prevalent methods used by advertiser and media to influence our behavior?
2.How does consumerism affect children?
3.What impact does consumerism have on holiday?
Feminism:
4.Why do you think the term ‘feminist’ has negative connotation? OR Why do you think being labeled as feminist has negative meaning?
5.What are some of the means feminists use to attract attention? Justify their choice.
Tourism and travel
1. Is the urge to travel genetic?
2. How do cameras affect our travel experience?
3. Why is extreme tourism growing in popularity?
4. Which disaster sites (if any) would you be interested in seeing? Why?
5. Is it ethical to travel to war affected areas?
Technology
1.What is hacktivism? What are some methods of hacktivism?
2.Should information be completely free?
3.How technology can be used to improve/alternate our bodies?
4.Discuss pros and cons of smartphones.
5.In what ways can smartphones improve our lives?
Media and journalism
1.What impact does a president have on manipulating media content? How and why he does it?
2.What impact does technology have on journalism?
3.What are the core components of creating a successful Internet/ YouTube video?
4.Does fear evoked by TV news stimulate people’s urge to buy? (4 or 5)
5. Can we trust the media?
Ethics
1. Explain the term “moral hazard”. When does it occur and what are the consequences of it?
2.Why is it so difficult or even impossible to send banks and huge corporations to prison?
3.How do we distinguish between right and wrong? What are the sources of ethical behavior?
4.Recent research suggested the wealthy are less ethical, why could this be so? Give examples of the unethical behaviors of the rich.
5.Can performance-enhancing drugs/ doping be permitted in sport? Why/Why not?
Hi there, I think that all of the questions posted by Magda are just fine. I also believe that 5 questions per topic is enough :D Anyway, I can only propose some additional questions for the topic of media and journalism. Mainly, a) What is the culture of fear? b) What is the role of the mass media in winding up our sense of insecurity?
ReplyDelete