I Watch Cycling In July said:
I read it very literally at first: Who would I rather BE. Not just inhabit the body of, actually be that person with all their personality, values and behaviors. The idea made my head explode, because the person I am, would much rather be a Greg Lemond character than a Lance Armstrong Character (the latter I have only contempt for). But of course if I was that person, I would have their values. In Lances case, that would mean I didn't give a fat rats **** whether I was a decent human being or not. So the question boils down to: who do you think is happiest with their life? Are super rich arseholes happier than wealthy people with kind hearts? Now there is a tricky philosophical question. The *******s probably are happier. C'est la vie.
I still choose Lemond, even though he is older, no matter how you frame the question. But that is because it's me doing the choosing.
Starting this thread was worth it just for your response. You're obviously a very thoughtful and philosophical person, introspective too, it would seem.
There's no right or wrong answer, only the answer that makes sense for the individual, based on their own unique experiences, values, perspective and worldview. I'm actually glad that more than a few people have indicated in voting their preference to be Lance, for it would've been a boring, failed exercise if the response was universally in favor of LeMond.
Now what if you'd been asked which you'd rather have as a father? With LA as your dad there is that enormous material wealth and the security that buys, along with the opportunities it facilitates, whereas LeMond is going to be much more the cuddly teddy-bear-dad who you'd think would make things all warm and fuzzy.
But then both have had very real personal demons impact their family life for a time...
At the end of the day, what's certain is that no manipulative, cynical, exploitative attorney was ever standing over LeMond's carcass after he'd been shot, crowing about how if only Greg could come back from near-death and win the Tour again, he'd be an inspiration to shooting victims everywhere, which would ensure his transformation from mere sporting icon into a global fcking
"brand!"
Much like the German people (and the world at large) and their unwillingness or failure to see what Hitler's plans were based on a reading of Mein Kampf, it now seems inconceivable that the public could not have expected to be exploited and fleeced by LA after reading the prescient words of his agent Bill Stapleton (quoted in It's not about the bike, I believe):
"In the beginning we had this brash brand of Texan...a phenomenon. Then you layered in cancer survivor, which broadened and deepened the brand, but even in 1998 there was very little corporate interest in Lance. Then he won the Tour de France, and the brand was complete. [You layered in family man, hero, comeback of the century, all these things. And then everybody wanted him.]"
Can there be any doubt that this was planned from the very beginning as an exercise in exploiting the public's gullibility and desperate need for a hero to massively enrich the principle players?