How Pro Sports Should React to Pot Legalization (But Won't)
From the Tumblr of Dan Shapiro, an interesting take on a possible intersection of legal pot and pro sports:
Until the federal ban on pot is lifted (or at least in the 24 states and District of Columbia that are home to every pro sports franchise), the possibility of professional sports allowing marijuana use is minimal. But by quietly removing weed from the banned substance list, professional athletics can join the rest of the country in removing the social stigma on herb, a lucrative cash crop that improves the quality of life of millions of Americans.
Marijuana need not be celebrated, but it also doesn't deserve vilification. So join us Commissioners Goodell, Bettman, and Selig, and soon-to-be Commissioner Silver. Because while you've watched plenty of sports, have you ever watched sport, on weed?
This is worth a discussion, to say the least, especially considering how many football, basketball, and baseball players toke up. However, professional sports may be the exact place where America's split personality on intoxicants is most fully concretized in custom and practice. Athletes are expected to destroy their bodies for their sport and submit to virtually any and all chemical, surgical, and mental modifications that will give them a real or imagined advantage. Yet they are also supposed to rigidly follow arbitrary and ever-changing policies where this or that tactic, substance, or custom is legal one moment and banned the next.
Good luck with that, NFL, NBA, and MLB!
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Always worth reposting: Doc Ellis and the LSD No-No
Awesome.
Who's pitching tonight?
"YOU, SUCKA!"
Holy shit, that is the best sports story I've ever heard.
What if two people want a photographer to take pictures of them smoking toegther and the photographer feels uncomfortable, can the smokers sue? What if someone wants a cake with a big marijuana leaf on top in iciong and the baker doesn't want to make it? Will the baker be put out of business?
If the answer to both of these questions is "Hell no, don't be ridiculous!" then I'm good.
Those questions can be applied to just about anything.
It's perfectly alright to enslave others if it's in the pursuit of social justice. The courts tell me so and they're, like, never wrong.
Dude that makes no sense at all man.
http://www.Privacy-Planet.com
Shapiro actually lists the NHL second, but nothing doing here. Entire league completely excised. What is this, ESPN?
Perhaps an example of virtually any and all mental and surgical modifications is warranted. I can think of a few surgical modifications being performed, preemptive Tommy John surgery being one, but I am not aware of mental modifications. A vast majority of surgeries are not modifications, unless you consider a broken bone being reset or torn cartilage being reattached as a modification as opposed to a repair.
Gotta love Mr. Shapiro recognizing the private enterprise nature of pro sports while simultaneously telling them what their drug policies should be.
Submit to virtually all chemical modifications? Like all of the chemicals that are banned and tested for?
Do you know how hard I'm praying for a Denver Broncos v, Seattle Seahawks Super Bowl? So fucking hard.
Which is a little weird, considering my atheism and all.
No way. Manning. Choking hazard.
Jesus, the man has a face like a foot and an IQ to match.
Cannabis is defacto "OK" in the NBA, isn't it?
The league doesn't test, but reefer is against the NBPA player code of conduct and there are repercussions for violations.