I've seena couple of days ago in a German TV program (Beckmann) a Profi biker confessing that the whole T-Mobile biking team was doping for years. He said he had to do so. By normal training, you would go no where. The whole team had to do it. that was the system .... join them or leave them. The team had to do this so that the sponsor would sign the contract for the next year, and each biker had to do it so that he doesn't lose his job and be thrown out of the team.
During the conversation, it was clear that they couldn't just blame the physicians, the bikers or the trainers as being responsible. They have stressed the influence of the "system", and that single persons stand helpless in such situations. They are really - at least in their opinion - not to be blamed, but the whole system is to be blamed.
Nowadays, and due to the fierce competition and globalization, more and more "systems" are getting corrupted. And one really has to face the truth, "Join them or leave them" is indeed a challenging reality.
Now comes the important question, is man only part of the system, moulded by its norms? to what extent is this true? Can a human being "change" the system? or it's just that the system, due to inherent factors, comes to the point where it must change? To what extent are humans accredited for changes that take place?
bored? ... I beg your pardon, this was just haflata !!!!!!!
