hrotha said:
Cobblestoned, what would you do to solve the problem of doping in pro cycling? Do you agree it's a serious problem?
I had doubts how this will be interpreted, but hey, I will answer you honestly.
My motive is not to destroy cycling completely. I look out of my window over German landscape, I see ground zero of cycling.
All these German cyclists speaking up, breaking omerta, good efforts to clean up were an enormous "help" for supporting cycling.

Nothing got better, only worse - cycling and Ullrich sacrificed.
Others go on like nothing happened and laugh about cycling, serious dopingtests and whereabouts.
Cycling/ASO started cleaning up - not the right way. Look at all these dopers, people said then.
German TV says cycling does nothing against doping. Then they do, after that German TV says, no we stop it, because there are too many positives.
Cycling was and is burned, but now no one builts it up again. This is the problem.
What I mean:
Stop whining and bashing. Stop destroying cycling. All the whining people and journalists like Kimmage don't help cycling - in the end they harm cycling.
Just complete thinking and you will get it.
Stop denying and destroying cyclings history. It doesn't make any sense.
Enjoy the race. Stand to cycling and its whole past and don't just pick out the raisins. Doesn't matter if you like them or not.
Cycling will never be better than society. Those are dreams, and if they nearly come true they are not honoured.
I don't need these dreams any more.
It doesn't make any sense to fight this fight, when socceros and other sports laugh about us, and people point with fingers on us or follow German TV's logics.
Do some good dopingtests, but don't send the urin of our best rider in last years to a proud German lab to find a fly-sh** of Clen.
Who honours that now ? Is anything better now ?
About the seriousness of the problem:
Whatever we do won't change any numbers - meaning worst case - dead athlets or fallen people, who are the typical homicide-argument.
Many of them were weak personalities who would have tumbled in "real life" anyway.
"Who tumbles here will tumble out there too." - we were told at the army. And this person was right.
That sounds hard but is my opinion.
The short version of all I wrote now:
We and cycling shouldn't exaggerate it.
At some point this is counterproductive.