I already gave this link: it's the WADA (World Anti Doping Agency) list of prohibited drugs. That's the exact list of what is forbidden, no more, no less.nae wrote:the problem is what constitutes a drug?
...
define drugs and then we can talk
WADA list of prohibited drugs: http://www.wada-ama.org/rtecontent/docu ... ist_En.pdf
I don't think it's a moral problem, I find it a very practical one. Most people don't want to work their butts off for many years to be defeated by a cheater in the end. Simple.
About the balance WhiteBlue mentions, here lays the crux of the matter: actually, modern drugs can improve your balance. Notice, White, that the drugs that worry me are for "healthy individuals" and, according to the "first batch" of users I know (Nature and Wired readers), they actually improve your mental power without apparent side effects on the short run. It's not like marijuana or coke, these are things designed to improve your brain function. They don't get you "high" in the normal sense we know, you don't get a "hangover" after using them and their side effects are minimal, they're used on children after all.
I believe the XIXth century was the century of machines, the XXth century was mainly devoted to advance in electronics, the XXIth century will be one devoted to genetics. There is no way to dismiss the fact that the knowledge we have about the human brain is not going to get worse, on the contrary. What kind of enhancements for people can we expect in the future? Do you want to have a tail? Do you want a third arm? Better muscles? Larger brain? I'm exaggerating a little, like a good spaniard, but these possibilities are becoming closer to be a reality. After all, gene therapy was included in the WADA list few months ago.
That's what worries me.
Besides, I don't think WADA levels are strict enough FOR RACING.
To counterargument nae's position about "I took a cough pill and they banned me", which is the "normal" defense of athletes when caught, the permited levels of drugs are well above that kind of mistakes. You have to have 4 times the levels of natural hormones ever registered in a human body to be sanctioned automatically, for example.
It's not a problem of morals: drugs are an epidemy in most sports. I haven't watched bycicle racing anymore, for instance. As for "regular people" I strongly stand for the position that it's their life. I'm sorry for drug users, I don't feel vindictive.
Let's hope racing continues to be relatively clean and I'm not counting junkies, marijuana users or alcohol adicts here, these people are not part of the problem: it's not the vices of people what matters, it's the intentional use of exotic drugs, that don't get you "high" but improve your performance.
I find disturbing the fact that you can take happily a pill (20 mg) of Ritalin and as much atomoxetine as your body can handle, right before the race, and you will not get even a report about it. That's unfair.
About the problems of science and "brain-steroids" I don't know what to say. I believe this is mainly a personal problem: do whatever you wish with your body, but you will pay the price, I think.
Belatti, for heaven sake, next time take a taxi and park the car.