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Congress should butt out on steroids

USA Today (Society for the Advancement of Education),  July, 2005  

Congress should be amending the U.S.'s failed foreign policy--not wasting time investigating private steroid use in sports, declares Andrew Bernstein, senior writer for the Ayn Rand Institute, Irvine, Calif. He insists that "Adult citizens of a free country--so long as they do not initiate force or fraud against others--have the right to ingest whatever substance they choose.

"Further, Major League Baseball and the National Football League are private organizations with the right to determine the rules under which they will associate with others. They alone have the right to determine whether they will ban players who take certain performance-enhancing substances, or ignore the practice.

"Congress should kick the habit of grandstanding for votes and let individuals and private organizations, including professional sports leagues, exercise their freedom. Congress should get back to its long-neglected but only proper function: to protect the individual rights of every American citizen against foreign or domestic threat. Private drug use is not a threat to America."

COPYRIGHT 2005 Society for the Advancement of Education
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group