Some drugs are legal, some are illegal. That status is down to political choice rather than any objective measure of harm - either to the individual or society. In many cases those harms are increased by the legal status governments impose.
I guess you're also equally scathing about the people who ride at the back on the last stage of the TdF drinking champagne and smoking cigars? They're drugs too.
I return to my earlier question. Someone who speeds in their car is far more likely to kill or injure someone than someone using drugs in a nightclub. Isn't that an even worse example to set? That they are prepared to break the law, risking the safety of others, for their own selfish desire to get somewhere quicker? Maybe we should lobby the UCI to ban people from races if they have points on their driving licences? They are. after all, in the public eye.
I guess you're also equally scathing about the people who ride at the back on the last stage of the TdF drinking champagne and smoking cigars? They're drugs too.
I return to my earlier question. Someone who speeds in their car is far more likely to kill or injure someone than someone using drugs in a nightclub. Isn't that an even worse example to set? That they are prepared to break the law, risking the safety of others, for their own selfish desire to get somewhere quicker? Maybe we should lobby the UCI to ban people from races if they have points on their driving licences? They are. after all, in the public eye.