Seems like the Armstrong stuff belongs in the Armstrong thread, not here.
As for the Lemond related discussion from the last few pages - I don't get it? It seems like setting up an impossible standard , then sitting "from up high" and declaring no one else is the perfect anti-doper.
Basically Lemond's critics set up two positions Lemond can have - "Angel Anti-doping crusader" or "bitter anti-Lance, anti-doping hypocrit."
They then set up an incredibly (impossibly?) strict standard of behavior that Lemond is supposed to follow. Don't ride in a car with dopers, use a lawsuit against Trek as a public platform against Armstrong, investigate and call out every possible doper everywhere, don't shake hands with or smile around dopers, etc...
Deviating from "the code," means Lemond falls from grace and goes from 'Angel' to 'hypocrit.'
Truth is, life isn't black and white. Lemond can have more of a grey position. I don't think that automatically makes him a hypocrit. It just means he has a different opinion on how to fight doping. He's been stuck in some tough positions and has had to take some calculated risks. I don't think "picking his battles" automatically makes him a hypocrit. Maybe it makes him pragmatic, or risk adverse - but it doesn't jettison him from 'angel' straight to 'heretic.'
He may have decided that being cordial to dopers, while publically acknowledging their doping past was sufficient. That throwing public 'I won't shake your hand, I won't talk to you' fits didn't do much. He may feel out of touch with today's peleton and not in a position to weigh in on 'who is using ACAR,' or 'which team is dirty.'
One might disagree with how he handles certain things, but not judge him by such black and white standards.