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I tend to agree with the Mitchell report. I think considering the circumstances and lack of cooperation they did a great job. I don't care who used in the past, I care that they clean things up as much as humanly possible from here on out. Give amnesty to everyone in MLB who admits to their past use and from now on enforce, enforce, enforce. If they don't admit it and get caught, then enforce, enforce, enforce with today's penalties as they'll have had their chance to come clean with no penalty. Let the future take care of the record books.

Is this possible? Probably not. Is it the right thing to do? Yes.
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CADaD


I also agree that it's time to move on. Find a way to test and hold everyone accountable from here on in. Make the penalty very stiff and if you violate the rules in the future than make them pay the price. I used to work for BGE a utility in Maryland. I was a over-head lineman. One day we had a meeting and were told that the company was going to start drug testing in one year. They gave plenty of notice and also offered help to anyone who came clean or had a drug problem. A year later they started random testing. There were many workers who when they got to work would be taken to be tested. Many times you never saw these guy's again. They laid the rules down and if you violated them you were gone. One year I was tested three times in one year. One worker that I knew who was fired had almost thirty years with the company. I think it's time that they start holding these guy's accountable for cheating, I don't care who they are.



Banditsbb

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