- Jul 17, 2009
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gree0232 said:No, but reasonable discussion turn on something called credibility.
So if you are trying to say Armstrong is doper, there is a standard by which such statement are held - like the WADA code.
If you produce speculation, great, that is called creative writing.
However, for some reason, when people say back it up with something, they are unreasonable and deserve to be derided as idiots for not immediately jumping on the Armstong band wagon (completely ignoring that such statements are an appeal to ridicule and thus a logical fallacy).
So, this may not be a court, but claiming that suspicion of doping should be rampant and totally unobjective or without even rudimentary standards is rediculous.
gree0232 said:You bring down corrupt organization by proving they are corrupt.
And when a federal investigation into those accussations produces .... nothing ....
What then?
Colm.Murphy said:Damage suffered by USPS is immaterial.
Granville57 said:I didn't realize the federal investigation had come to a conclusion![]()
stephens said:I've always been unclear about how exactly the USPS or by extension the US Government or taxpayer (who doesn't even fund the USPS) was actually defrauded by Armstrong. Did they somehow not get what they paid for - publicity? Would they be damaged in any way if the public was to learn that Armstrong had violated some rules or laws while sponsored by USPS?
Can someone explain this charge to me?
lean said:except no one here claimed that. what you did is called a straw man. you should research logical fallacies a little further.
jraama said:..... And Landis could get up to 30% of any financial penalties imposed.
.....
Deagol said:Some here have equated the latest SI article with the investigation itself.![]()
gree0232 said:You bring down corrupt organization by proving they are corrupt.
And when a federal investigation into those accussations produces .... nothing ....
What then?
gree0232 said:That would be because the SI article is about the investigation.
"In light of those proceedings, SI writers Selena Roberts and David Epstein reviewed hundreds of pages of documents and interviewed dozens of sources in Europe, New Zealand and the U.S. for a story in the Jan. 24 issue of the magazine, which will be available on newsstands Wednesday."
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2011/more/01/18/lance.armstrong/index.html?eref=sihp
gree0232 said:Well, then I suggest you go back and look at what that was a response to, where you will clearly see someone complaining about 'evidence' and how this is not a court.
A strawman is taking someone's position and spinning it into statements they did not make. Someone clearly made those statements.
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showthread.php?p=416653#post416653
You can clearly see Granville57 saying exactly that.
That would be how evidence works.
You claim something .... and back it up with something tangible - as in a direct quote for a statement, or a positive dope test (real one, not botched research tests), financial transaction record, PED's in possession of athlete or known associate, or credible nearly universally corroberated eye witness accounts to equate to doping accussations.
suspicion of doping should be rampant and totally unobjective or without even rudimentary standards
Dr. Maserati said:Hey, you know how you like evidence so much and how people shouldn't say anything without evidence.
Can you show some evidence (your standard) that the Ferderal Investigation has produced nothing............. or did you just lie.
stephens said:IANAL, but as far as I know, civil courts exist to make people whole for damages they have suffered. Unless the usps can show they were somehow damaged by the defendant (tailwind or armstrong or whomever), I don't understand how they will receive a dime. (furthermore, breaking the contract is not a crime anyone will go to jail for either).
gree0232 said:Well, then I suggest you go back and look at what that was a response to, where you will clearly see someone complaining about 'evidence' and how this is not a court.
A strawman is taking someone's position and spinning it into statements they did not make. Someone clearly made those statements.
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showthread.php?p=416653#post416653
You can clearly see Granville57 saying exactly that.
That would be how evidence works.
You claim something .... and back it up with something tangible - as in a direct quote for a statement, or a positive dope test (real one, not botched research tests), financial transaction record, PED's in possession of athlete or known associate, or credible nearly universally corroberated eye witness accounts to equate to doping accussations.
gree0232 said:So.....
blah blah blah blather blah blah blah
lean said:he said we could speak freely, express or opinions, and that this wasn't a court of law. those things are all true. he never claimed anything remotely close to:
that's a gross exaggeration for effect in order to set up a staw man argument. it is a logical fallacy which is hilarious because you accused others of making them right before doing it yourself. seriously, i laughed when i read it. we're done here b/c i actually suppose your real goal is just to disrupt an otherwise purposeful discussion.
Colm.Murphy said:I simply don't see how they can withstand the weight of it all. Their farce is coming apart at the seams.
runninboy said:sorry i just couldn't stand to actually quote you accurately.It seems so pointless. We are all speculating here. We have no actual proof beyond what is written, that is pretty much a given on the internet.However we also know that in this day in age lies will be exposed fairly quickly. The legal system does however take a little longer to convict people as well it should.
The way i see it, you are basically claiming that everything in the SI article means nothing. However you of course are wrong. If someone were to publish so many accusations in such fashion without many reputable sources they would be exposing themselves to a huge lawsuit that would be easily winnable. In addition since the main subject of the article is a man who has previously shown no hesitation to bring legal actions in a similar vein you must admit his inaction is troubling to say the least.
Here would be an example lets say you are LA and completely clean. You have no knowledge of this HemeAssist or whatever it is called. It does not matter what the rationale is behind the SI story because you would know you hold the high ground of absolute truth. Boom! lawsuit! Immediately with no hesitiation. Same for the Swiss accusations, No way it ever happened, i would be on the phone with the lawyer and have the suit filed before the issue hit the newsstands! Same with all these accusations you know they can't be close to being true, you are as pure as the driven snow, so anyone who would dare to smear your sterling image deserves to pay.
and yet there is nothing....
Whether or not a major magazine would gamble their entire existence on a pack of unsubstantiated accusations does not seem to be an issue with you . For the rest of us who live on planet earth, we understand the reality of the situation and thus give their version of events a little more weight. In the meantime you can stand there and yell liar liar pants on fire but it will probably not last for long.
Now i see why MacRoadie had you on ignore.
gree0232 said:So, this may not be a court, but claiming that suspicion of doping should be rampant and totally unobjective or without even rudimentary standards is rediculous.
lean said:except no one here claimed that. what you did is called a straw man. you should research logical fallacies a little further.
gree0232 said:Well, then I suggest you go back and look at what that was a response to, where you will clearly see someone complaining about 'evidence' and how this is not a court.
A strawman is taking someone's position and spinning it into statements they did not make. Someone clearly made those statements.
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showthread.php?p=416653#post416653
You can clearly see Granville57 saying exactly that.
Granville57 said:I'm still not clear as to why some people on here believe that others of us have confused an internet forum for a court of law. We haven't. It isn't.
No one is going to jail based on what we say here. It's an expression of our informed opinions. We can do that. So we do.
We don't need to prove anything here. Common sense is the judge for many of us; ignorance is the "crime;" and the punishment would seem to be the inability to form independent thoughts based on rational observation. A horrible fate indeed.
gree0232 said:'...'A strawman is taking someone's position and spinning it into statements they did not make. Someone clearly made those statements.
http://forum.cyclingnews.com/showthread.php?p=416653#post416653
You can clearly see Granville57 saying exactly that. '...'
"'...' It's an expression of our informed opinions. '...'Common sense is the judge for many of us; ignorance is the "crime;" and the punishment would seem to be the inability to form independent thoughts based on rational observation.'...'"
gree0232 said:'...' but claiming that suspicion of doping should be rampant and totally unobjective or without even rudimentary standards is rediculous.
Granville57 said:Enough of this idiocy. Stop the insanity!
Is Bobke so truly pathetic that he thinks we are all complete and total morons?
I was going to start a new thread just for this, but since we're already here, I'll keep it on this one.
I transcribed Bob Roll's ridiculous response to the SI article so that we can be clear about what he said and parse those words if need be. No wonder very few people want to speak openly about doping when this kind of myth-reinforcement is what they have to contend with. Congratulations, Bob. I hope you get subpoenaed too. Try telling your fairy tales to the Grand Jury.
Here it is, verbatim:
What an overtly, transparent joke. I can't wait for corroborating testimony to see the light of day. I hope you're proud of yourself, Bob. You write that yourself?
I guess we can expect to see the term "yellow journalism" sprinkled around in the coming weeks. That Fabiani, boy. He's a tricky one.
(Oh, and just what the hell is so funny, Bobke?)
I Watch Cycling In July said:Granville57's wrote
You described his post as "
That is a gross misrepresentation.![]()
gree0232 said:.
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Elagabalus said:Ho-hum...
Did the 1999 samples contain traces of EPO or not? And didn't Armstrong willingly provide the codes of his samples? And didn't the codes match the very same samples which contained EPO?