from The Daily Texan:
http://www.dailytexanonline.com/a_lesson_from_phelps_loosen_up-1.1357301{snip}
As Radly Balko put it in a column posted on Reason.com, “The public just gets a voyeuristic thrill from watching an elite athlete fall from grace – all the better if you get to exercise a little moral righteousness in the process. And it’s hypocritical righteousness at that, given that 40 percent of you have tried pot at least once in your lives.”
If there hasn’t been any press about Phelps since the Olympics, it’s because he’s been busy. Many people recall the $1 million bonus Phelps received for netting eight gold medals, but what a lot of people don’t know is that
he used that money to start the Michael Phelps Foundation to help support swimming programs for underprivileged kids. He went on an eight-city tour to promote the organization. With any luck he was able to find the kids a role model in one of the cities.
Perhaps it was Phelps’ response to the allegations that bothered the American public. See, he must not know how accusations against athletes in this country work. Rather than deny the validity of the picture, call it a Photoshop or pull a Roger Clemens and blame the whole ordeal on his athletic trainer, Phelps took responsibility for his actions and acknowledged that he made a mistake.
In a country where taking accountability seems to be a lost art form, especially for athletes, Phelps has been made a scapegoat.
The fact is that a lot of 23-year-olds smoke pot; they just don’t happen to win gold medals for a living. No, they prefer football.