By Shawn Macomber on 1.18.08 @ 12:08AM
The Intelligence Squared debate series elevates the discussion on performance enhancing drugs.
MANHATTAN -- The Oxford-style Intelligence
Squared debates at the Asia Society are precisely what I hoped
to discover moving to New York City last spring: Provocative,
unabashedly intellectual, lively. How could anyone who slogs
through the pathetic, pandering spectacle of modern American
politics not love a debate series with a mission statement
that includes a promise to "transcend the toxically emotional and
reflexively ideological"?
Organizers certainly did not shy away from controversy Tuesday
evening, inviting six men of varying backgrounds to debate the
proposition, We should accept performance-enhancing drugs in
competitive sports.
Two bioethicists -- Dr. Norman Fost and Oxford's Julian
Savulescu -- joined Reason magazine Senior Editor Radley Balko in
support of the motion. Dale Murphy, two-time National League MVP
for the 1980s Atlanta Braves teams, argued against the motion
alongside well-known sportscaster George Michael and Richard Pound,
a 1960 Olympic finalist who now runs the grandly/sternly-titled
World
Anti-Doping Agency. Bob Costas, though clearly not enamored of
the "for" position, moderated with a warmth and humor that gave
glimpse of how fame found him.
As someone who doesn't follow sports I walked into the debate
without any real dog in the fight. Generally, I knew my sympathies
would lie with those who believed, for once, we might want to have
a grown-up, non-hysterical national conversation about synthetic or
organic substances and, further, that at the very least what
professional sports organizations do or do not allow should be far
outside the purview of Congress. "I'm not advocating that Congress
mandate to the NFL that they have to allow performance-enhancing
drugs," Balko argued at one point, "but I also don't think it's any
business of Congress telling leagues they have to ban them."
Amen. When Virginia Republican Rep. Tom Davis justifies such
intervention on the grounds that Congress has the power to
investigate "at any time, on any matter," so many red flags shoot
up in my mind that it suddenly resembles a 1950s Mao rally.
(Referring to Davis's sudden dedication to scaled-back "smart
growth" when housing in his safe district threatened to attract Democrats, Balko got off
the best line of the evening: "This guy is cheating at democracy
and he's lecturing baseball players on fairness.") Connecticut
Republican Rep. Chris Shays had it right when he told
Time, "as it relates to the legacy of individual players,
and the disputes among players and their trainers -- that's not our
responsibility."
If fans want to shame players out of lucrative advertising deals
or leagues want to run them out of town on a
rail, fine. The nation need not take its moral cues from Tom
Davis and Henry Waxman.
AS TO WHAT EXTENT performance-enhancing drugs should be regulated
within sports, I will mimic our new hope-mongering national hero
Barack Obama and vote, simply, cowardly dodge, er, I mean,
present.
With a mind open to condemnation, I had been bracing for an
avalanche of horrifying statistics from the opposition. Instead,
they offered mostly a lot of flailing posturing without much actual
engagement of the other side's arguments. Michael, for example,
bellowed out a steady list of tragedies that had befallen unnamed
players he'd spoken with in confidence, explicitly adding after
each tale that there was no proof steroids had
anything to do with the horrors he had just detailed as a
somewhat novel way of suggesting the drugs had everything
to do with it.
"I don't want to have to go to the cemetery and tell all the
athletes who are dead there, 'Hey guys, you're going to have a lot
more of your friends coming because we're going to legalize this
stuff,'" Michael said, drawing a bit from that well of toxic
emotionalism. "The only good news out of it? They wouldn't hear the
news. Because they're all dead."
According to Pound, support for the motion was tantamount to
agreeing our children should be walking "chemical stockpiles" and
our beloved national pastimes transformed into "increasingly
violent, extreme and meaningless" activities "practiced by a class
of chemical and/or genetic mutant gladiators." Why this has not
already come to pass isn't clear. (The Mitchell Report seems to
suggest a good many of baseball's celeberati are already "juiced"
to the max.) And "meaningless"? To whom? Baseball has remained
popular throughout the controversy, it was noted more than
once.
Pound's books very well may tell a different tale, but
this night his dissent appeared more intent on imposing a personal
aesthetic of how players should look and behave than offering hard
evidence as to why rules should not change. Likewise, Dale Murphy
doesn't want his record surpassed by someone with a chemical leg
up, which is understandable. All future policy can't be set on the
basis of protecting Murphy's record, though. That may be the
outcome of a policy, but it is not a rationale
for a policy in an ever changing world.
One reason I personally don't consume alcohol is that I prefer
not to subsidize the misery it causes. (You'd know the other reason
if you ever spent an evening with drunk-you.) Nevertheless,
teenagers frequently abuse alcohol, illegally. Other journalists
have an easier time schmoozing at parties with a couple drinks in
them. Yet who would accept an attempt by me to foist a
neo-prohibitionist philosophy upon society? Personal bias is or at
least should not be enough to impose one's will on others,
whatever Henry Waxman has told you.
THE MOST COMPELLING argument against allowing performance-enhancing
drugs into professional sports is that athletes who don't want to
"juice" may feel compelled to do so as a prerequisite to reasonably
compete. It could be, as Balko argued, that inexpensive, legal,
regulated-and-therefore-safer drugs might "democratize"
professional sports by making it possible for poor athletes to
attain the same advantages rich athletes currently glean from
access to pricey high-altitude training facilities and the other
privileged like.
Still, while it's true there are plenty of other sacrifices and
dangers a professional athlete submits his or herself to,
hypodermic needles containing these drugs obviously gives people
pause. Maybe it's natural resistance to change? A sense of real
danger? Media sensationalism? Subliminal fear of the Ubermensch?
Does any of this outweigh, in principle, allowing individuals,
as Balko put it, to "explore their own boundaries and their own
potential"? Overall, I'd argue no. Within the confines of
professional sports? It depends. Sports fans should vote with their
dollars and their feet. They, after all, are the ones who keep
professional sports afloat, not the U.S. Congress.
WHEN FIRST ARRIVING at an IQ Squared debate you are asked to vote
for or against the motion, or declare yourself as undecided using a
little electronic pad attached to each seat. After the debate the
process repeats. Initially 18 percent of the sold-out crowd voted
for the motion, 63 percent against and 19 percent were undecided.
An hour-and-a-half later 37 percent voted for the motion, 59
percent opposed it and a mere four percent remained undecided.
However clever or grounded the arguments, it is difficult to
imagine performance-enhancing drugs receiving the Mainstream
America Seal of Approval in the foreseeable future. And maybe they
shouldn't. What the IQ Square debates prove, however, is that
thoughtful, intelligent debate on even the most sensitive,
controversial issues is possible and, what's more, people
are actually still capable of changing their minds.
Now if we could just expand that ethic and process beyond the
exquisite tree-lined interior of the Asia Society, perhaps we could
have a discussion worthy of our hopefully still-evolving frontal
lobes.
American Spectator Contributing Editor Shawn Macomber is writing a book on the Global Class
War.
topics:
Barack Obama, Business, Sports, Books