Re:
Not necessarily because rumour becomes a fact overtime, wether it happened or not. I think the Boogerd case is probably it : he thinks that since it was so long ago and taken as granted by so many people, it is true.
I don't know if you have teenagers around you but ask them about Apollo 11. Give a few decades and men never went on the moon. Everything was shot in a studio by Stanley Kubrick.
sniper said:And to add to that, I'd like to ask you:
Is there a precedent of cyclists spreading *false* rumors about other cyclists because they are bitter and jealous?
I mean, of course I think it's fair to say that Floyd, Jaksche, and Rasmussen decided to spill the beans out of some sort of bitterness, but they hardly spilled any *false* rumors, did they?
We do have precedent for something else: omerta viz. don't spit in the soup.
In fact, we have ample documentation of that phenomenon, and tbh it goes directly counter to your conspiracy theory. Rather, I would argue:
Other things equal: procyclists (or enablers like Testa) have no motivation to spill beans in the first place, and they have even less motivation to spill *false* beans.
It means that, in those rare cases that beans are actually spilled (or rumors spread), there is more likely than not some kind of truth to those beans/rumors.
Not necessarily because rumour becomes a fact overtime, wether it happened or not. I think the Boogerd case is probably it : he thinks that since it was so long ago and taken as granted by so many people, it is true.
I don't know if you have teenagers around you but ask them about Apollo 11. Give a few decades and men never went on the moon. Everything was shot in a studio by Stanley Kubrick.