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Old Fri Nov 16, 2007, 01:56pm
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Quote:
Originally Posted by SanDiegoSteve
Hasn't been convicted yet. It's not over till the 'roids-raging fat lady sings. I still doubt he does one day of jail time because he is extremely rich and can probably buy his way out of it. I find it comical that this modern day Salem witch-hunt is going to go after Bonds, as if that's going to deter the hundreds of other pro athletes that are on steroids. A joke is what it is, just not funny.
Interesting article: The Truth Could Have Set Bonds Free

In case someone hasn't registered for the NY Times web site and doesn't want to, here are a couple of quotes from the article:

Quote:
Back when the first grand jury was convened in 2003, Bonds could have quivered a bit and said he had been a bad slugger by going for the quick fix and deceiving the American public. He could have promised to never do it again. And he could have walked, free to break Babe Ruth’s record and Henry Aaron’s record without this infamy hanging over him. Americans love a good confession.

But the truth is not in Barry Bonds, who is so far outside the limits of reality that he did not see the advantage to a little show of humility, a little flash of honesty.
Quote:
Appearing before the original Balco grand jury, on Dec. 11, 2003, Giambi testified that he had taken steroids, human growth hormone and testosterone, and for apparently testifying truthfully he was granted immunity.

The grand jury was not after Giambi. It probably was not even after Bonds, even though Bonds (and the few supporters he has left) contend that the Balco investigation was always about getting him. This only shows how detached he is from reality.

“You use the consumer to build your case against the manufacturer,” Travis T. Tygart of the United States Anti-Doping Agency said last March, before he became chief executive of that agency. The hope is to keep harmful and illegal drugs from impressionable children and adults who are trying to emulate negative role models like Giambi and Bonds.

Giambi, the son of a banker, is a reasonable person. He understood that he would harm himself if he lied to a grand jury. He took some public criticism for a short time and then settled into his continual decline. Bonds strutted and denied and blustered and bullied, as he has done to most people around him all his life.
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