red_flanders said:
If you're not questioning the logic of this line of reasoning, why question anything about the position?
Because it leaves Sky in a bad place? Well that's fits the old, "not liking where the logic leads" problem. It's akin to climate denier arguments. No real argument about the facts, but since we all hate the conclusion, some subset of the populace will react to the inconvenient truth of the situation and argue from a place of frustration, anger, defensiveness, etc., and resort to "arguments" like "Why is everyone picking on Sky" or "Nothing they can do will change your mind", and so on. None of which address the evidence that they're doping, but are simply a manifestation at the fan's frustration that they can't refute the evidence and look for alternate routes of attack or argumentation.
No. I'm not debating the "facts" -though in my view they're still mostly opinion and speculation, at best estimated probabilities and educated deductions. But looking at how best to obtain new data in order to better ascertain them (in my view there is still work to be done).
red_flanders said:
I agree completely that the original sins (there are many, including transformations, unbelievable performances, hiring doping enablers and doctors, lying about a great many things) cannot be undone. So there is little point in being transparent now, that's true.
Exactly. In my view that runs counter to what you were saying before. If your mind can't be changed, why would you call on transparency from a team you "know" to be cheating? What's the point? What would be their incentive?
red_flanders said:
Of course the simple reality is that they can't be truly transparent, because of course they're doping and true transparency would simply be proof of and an admission of guilt. "Full transparency" is not on the table. Not because it would prove nothing, but because it would prove everything.
No it wouldn't. It would confirm what we you know, that Froome and friends have had an unusual progression. Looking at the ride data wouldn't tell you anything you don't already know from the VAM models and the leaks. Looking at the blood data wouldn't tell you anything the bio-passport guys don't already know.
I was just trying to pick at a question that was posted previously, but I think it led me somewhere. Full transparency from Sky wouldn't convince anyone of anything. It would not help Sky in any way either. I think that's an interesting conclusion from an incentives perspective that could be examined in order to work out how to actually achieve better transparency, or it could just turn out to be an inconvenient truth.