Baseball, the Olympics, and every other high-profile sport have been rocked by drug scandals in recent years as athletes turn to science to make them grow, heal, and move faster.
online pharmacy buy ivermectin online no prescription pharmacy
buy temovate online annalsofhealthresearch.com/lib/pkp/includes/php/temovate.html no prescription
These sports aren't immune from the occasional recreational drug scandal either, as millionaire athletes with 9th-grade educations indulge their love of weed or, in rarer cases, rich man's party drugs like heroin or coke.
buy flexeril online annalsofhealthresearch.com/lib/pkp/includes/php/flexeril.html no prescription
Then there's NASCAR, which ends up suspending superstar driver Jeremy Mayfield for failing a drug test…for Adderall XL and crystal meth. The last person I knew who did either of those drugs was 18, unemployed, and lived in a mobile home in Janesville, Wisconsin.
online pharmacy buy elavil online no prescription pharmacy
buy lasix online annalsofhealthresearch.com/lib/pkp/includes/php/lasix.html no prescription
Keep it classy, NASCAR.
jazzbumpa says:
Well – I could turn a blind eye to crystal meth – but Claritin D?!? That should be career ending for anyone.
Actually, though, I think a guy with ADHD ought to be allowed his Adderall RX.
Then, again – maybe he shouldn't be driving a race car . . .
Oblio says:
Careful… the crystal meth angle to this story is WAY unsubstantiated, and NASCAR is piling on Jeremy to poison his struggling career. Some facts are already coming out that Claritin-D can generate weird drug test results when mixed with other meds, and know that Claritin is a MAJOR sponsor of Carl Edwards, a NASCAR Golden Boy. It wouldn't be good for NASCAR if a major sponsor's product was to blame for Mayfield's posi test, so they slaughter him… lots more to be told on this story, and NASCAR is going Bush on the whole thing, i.e. obfuscate and deny, deny, deny. NASCAR has also destroyed the career of racer Carl Long, a low-budget owner/driver whose engine was found to be .017 of an inch overbored for a practice prior to qualifying for a race. He was fined $200,000, a record for even the biggest teams, which he can't possibly afford and so is effectively out of business. NASCAR also did the hush hush on last year's lawsuit by an ex-official (a Black woman) claiming she was hounded by other officials with KKK hoods and racist pranks and comments. Go to any NASCAR race and you'll see a multitude of Confederate flags and lots of right-wing hoons drunk on beers and patriotism. I am a big NASCAR fan, and of racing in general, but NASCAR is starting to look like Big Brother.