Maxiton said:
Do they teach reading where you're from, or were you not paying attention that day? I said, "Mods: don't you dare clean up this anti-American clap-trap." (Not "America bashing".) And thanks for the enlightenment on European tradition - that would be the same tradition in which tyranny, torture, corruption, cronyism, and bully behavior play such a prominent role, that it was necessary to found a new country, this one, dedicated to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Perhaps you can understand, then, why some Americans have been isolationists.
With this European jingoism you cheapen and degrade the argument for clean sport.
I think, Maxiton, your many salient points about a secular papacy in an old world sport within the so called Old World, as well as a systemic tradition from the
conquistadores to Nazi/fascism (which, by the way, gave rise to the very US state: just ask the "Indians" and the Mexicans – and blacks) having continental roots have an (obvious) historical merit, but what they fail to recognize is the critical nature of what's being debated here: namely, the particular brand (and I don't use that term casually) of persona that could only have been produced, today, from the other Atlantic shore.
That's obviously not the fault of the Europeans, just as it wasn't the fault of the Americans for having had their global hegemony basically served up on a plate in the form of two World Wars, when the very deep rooted rivalries, which politically as opposed to in a bellicose fashion are still being played out today in the present EU drama, caused a form of historical suicide: it's simply recent history.
My points, at least, were connected to this recent history, in light of particular styles and affinities. In these senses Armstrong represented a certain corporate and overbearing image that only America has known how to produce recently. Just look at US politics and ideology today and what's discussed in Europe. Nobody was debating the issues you brought up, but one relevant (above all) to these times: the way in which a hegmonic US culture imposes itself around the world. In this sense, Lance has been metaphorically indicitive of a much greater phenomenon and his non-case has offended the sensibilities of the part (again within the cycling context here) who have been subjected to it. And because it is America's historical moment (and no longer Europe's) and since the US isn't the recipient of what it diseminates around the world as a result, such backlash criticism is only the enevitable consequence of the privileges and honors the US superpower holds and in light of America's preponderousness over the Europeans.
So your comprehensible affirmations don't make irrelevant or unfounded those of the others, because they are simply out of context and off point. In other words, these things aren't mutually exclusive and to imply otherwise is a false and deliberately misleading casuistry, which someone as intelligent as yourself should avoid.
PS: And now to add insult to the injury, Contador receives his just punishment, but Lance walks "clean." There truly is no justice in this world.