Jerlins wrote:Well, one of the the above actually. Hank Aaron had admitted to using "Greenies". So can we agree to call his home run record tainted? Can we agree Bonds and Clemens (whose word I believe vs that of a convicted perjuror) has as much right to the HOF as perhaps the pioneer of chemical use to enhance performance in baseball in Hank Aaron? So why put this admitted cheater on a different standard than any of the steroid era players?
Like a previous poster mentioned, Steroids were not illegal in baseball until 2004. You tell me, if you were a ballplayer, and a trainer told you he could enhance your performance, and it was not a banned substance in baseball, would you not follow your trainer's advice?
If Hank Aaron took the occasional fatigue pill, I would say he didn't cheat and deserves to be in the HOF. I do believe in some nuance and complication. Taking a few fatigue pills is not the equivalent of regularly taking PED's to unnaturally accelerate body development and enhance performance. If he did it regularly, sure, I could see the argument for removal. If you think using greenies at all merits his removal, I wouldn't agree, but I wouldn't begrudge your strict interpretaion.
I, myself wouldn't risk my health taking PEDs. However, whatever I would do is irrelevant. Neither I, or anybody else, is the sole moral compass determining the ethics of a particular behavior. However, the allure of unethical behavior is never justification for it. It is only its explanation. So the allure of using PEDs does not jusify using PEDs.
Finally, the HOF doesn't just judge on the official rules of baseball. It is an ancillary entity, with its own rules. it judges on whether players effectively cheated and/or harmed the game, not just MLB's explicit rules. I have posted how they have harmed the game, but nobody has really replied. Here are the ways I stated the roiders damaged the game. What do you think of them?:
1. Their roid-assisted accomplishments on the field stole wins from opposing teams--with no or fewer roided players--and their fans.
2. Their roid-assisted accomplishments stole records from honest, diligent players like Maris and Aaron.
3. Their roid-assisted statistics cost non-roided players--with uninflated statistics--money in contract and arbitration negotiations