Posted on 02/01/2002 1:48:00 PM PST by Notwithstanding
SALT LAKE CITY, February 1, 2002 (LSN.ca) - In the Feb.4 issue of Report magazine, "Brave New World", columnist Celeste McGovern writes of a gruesome method of blood doping used by some female athletes to boost athletic performance. Since enhancing drugs and even regular blood doping can be identified by regulators, the pregnancy-abortion scheme, while officially banned, is virtually impossible to stop.
Mona Passignano, director of research at the Texas pro-life group Life Dynamics is quoted by Report quoting from a Finnish sports medicine expert: "Now that drug testing is routine, pregnancy is becoming the favourite way of getting an edge on competition." One Russian athlete told a reporter that as long ago as the '70s, gymnasts as young as 14 were ordered to sleep with their coaches to get pregnant--and then abort. The procedure is so well known it has made it to the textbooks. LifeSite found the method described in an online textbook in physiology by Dr. Poul-Erik Paulev of the Department of Medical Physiology, University of Copenhagen.
Professor Paulev writes that pregnancy seems to increase muscle strength in female athletes. "Female top athletes - just following the time when they gave birth to their first child - have set several world records. Of course, this is acceptable as a natural and unintended event. However, in some countries female athletes have become pregnant for 2-3 months, in order to improve their performance just after the abortion."
And it does not in the least surprise me that Eastern Bloc countries would have their teenage athletes impregnated by the coaches. The Eastern Bloc combined the most advanced training techniques on earth with the absolutely ruthless health-sacrificing steroid programs. Women in particular suffered later in life from the effects of years of concentrated steroid, IGF-1, and growth hormone abuse.
Believe it or not, I have read that members of the East German track team would be assigned a "partner" before big meets, as German physiologists thought that sex before races might boost performance.
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The Report Newsmagazine - Online Edition = 0) && (bAgent.indexOf("Mozilla/3") >= 0) && (bAgent.indexOf("Mac") >= 0)) return true; // dont follow link else return false; // dont follow link } CSStopExecution = false; function CSAction(array) { return CSAction2(CSAct, array); } function CSAction2(fct, array) { var result; for (var i=0;i=4) { var sw=screen.width-20; var sh=screen.height; var newwidth=action[3]; var newheight=action[4]; var positionleft=(sw-newwidth)/2; var positiontop="" if (action[7] || action[8] || action[9] == true) positiontop=(sh-newheight)/3; positiontop=(sh-newheight)/2.5; } newwindow=window.open(action[1],action[2],wf); newwindow.focus() if(navigator.appVersion.charAt(0) >=4) { for(width1 = 1 ; width1 < positionleft ; width1 = width1 + 10) newwindow.moveTo(width1,positiontop) } } // -->
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Current Issue Seldom has anything we've published ever received as much response, both pro and con, as has Jeff White's October 22 essay "If it's terrorists we're after, let's start hunting in Jerusalem." Here you can read the whole controversy from start to finish--with a new batch of letters posted Nov. 22.
Perfect happiness for the Liberals is this: Day wins and Clark stays
Grant Hill Stockwell Day
With the Canadian Alliance leadership race underway, and the Liberals jostling in the backroom to line up behind Chretien, we thought there might be fun and profit in re-examining a rough and rowdy old-fashioned leadership convention from 19 years ago. Here are the Tories, when they were the still Canada's conservative choice, on the floor of Ottawa's convention centre, sweating and screaming, waving and exchanging "lollipops" in the turning tide. Martin Brian Mulroney would emerge the winner over a hapless Joe Clark and go on to be Prime Minister for two terms....
For the first time, we bring you the history of the magazine in excerpts from two anniversay issues--at 10 years and at 25. It's been an enlightening and sometimes wild ride, and it's a great read... In Search of the Sixties We are now producing Volume 10 of the Alberta in the Twentieth Century series of history books. It will cover the Sixties, including everything from the fads and foibles of youth culture and the rise of modern feminism to Ernest Manning's last decade in power and the arrival of Pierre Trudeau. We need your help to tell the story of this extraordinary decade. If you have any memorabilia that could be used as illustrations--photographs, posters, clothes, books, magazines, bumper stickers, pamphlets--and you would be willing to loan it to us, please contact ATC Research Director James Leech at 780-930-7839 or aresearch1@compusmart.ab.ca. |
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SOCIETY
It's simple as ABC--deny, deny, deny Almost no general news media in North America covered two Abortion/Breast Cancer (ABC) stories this winter..by Joanne Byfield...From the Feb. 4 issue, posted 10:45 a.m. MST Feb 1 OPENING SHOTS The costs of Glen Clark's cronyism are now being tallied Campbell is now arguing, in essence, that a decade's worth of NDP favouritism towards its civil service confederates left the provincial treasury in ruins...by Terry O'Neill...From the Feb. 4 issue, posted 9:09 a.m. MST Jan 30 RAPID FIRE Cry hysteria, and let loose the dogs of public-relations war! If the B.C. Teachers' Federation is really serious about winning its just-launched PR war with the Liberal government, then it had better hope the public forgets the union's abysmal track record in predicting the impact of supposedly "anti-education" legislation...by Terry O'Neill...Web Only, posted 2:35 p.m. MST Jan 29 SOCIETY Control by 'great fear' Cruelty to women continues in Afghanistan, and extends to Canada...by Pat Hansard...From the Feb. 4 issue, posted 7:34 a.m. MST Jan 29 OPENING SHOTS How three Albertans may fix socialized medicine It looks like a green light from Ottawa to let Alberta pioneer Canadian healthcare reform...by Paul Bunner...From the Feb. 4 issue, posted 9:16 a.m. MST Jan 28 POLITICS Stockwell Day: The Report Interview This is the third in our series of interviews with the Canadian Alliance leadership candidates. Stockwell Day spoke to Senior Editor Kevin Michael Grace January 10. A portion of this conversation appears in the Feb. 4, 2002 issue of The Report. As advertised to our subscribers, this is the complete text...Web Only, posted 8:56 a.m. MST Jan 27 THE RIGHT EYE There is scant virtue in having 'values' What is the difference between "virtues" and "values," and does it matter? For two millenniums, philosophers measured both individuals and societies by the criterion of virtue...by Ian Hunter...From the Jan. 21 issue, posted 12:55 p.m. MST Jan 26 LETTER FROM THE PUBLISHER Gage Gabriel and the angels It's interesting that the child didn't call them angels--the grown-ups did. He only called them girls. Because everything is new to a three-year-old, nothing is particularly remarkable...by Link Byfield...From the Jan. 21 issue, posted 9:02 a.m. MST Jan 25 THE HOME FRONT The most unlikely sex fantasies are in the minds of 'health experts' Would someone please explain the difference between a compulsion and a "staple"? Perhaps the former sounds destructive, while the latter seems more user-friendly, but it's all one to me...by Mariette Ulrich...From the Jan. 21 issue, posted 8:35 a.m. MST Jan 24 OPENING SHOTS The absurdity of blaming all religions for Sept. 11 The deep thinkers argue that the "blind faith" supposedly fostered by religion produces a disconnection with reality and a loss of common sense...by Terry O'Neill...From the Jan. 21 issue, posted 9:55 a.m. MST Jan 23 GUEST COLUMN Now is the time for social conservatives to move forward, not retrench Social conservatism--particularly regarding the family as central to the fabric of society--is in the ascendancy...by Stephen Harper...From the Jan. 21 issue, posted 8:03 a.m. MST Jan 22 ECLECTICA What we are fighting for There are 300 million different ways of life in North America and, increasingly, they are mutually hostile...by Kevin Michael Grace...From the Jan. 21 issue, posted 2:24 p.m. MST Jan 20 Cover Story
by Kevin Michael Grace Check out the contents of our Feb. 4, 2002 print edition. The REPORT© Newsmagazine is published by |
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Update: 10:45 a.m. MST Fri Feb 1 National Post: Let morals guide you, Reform founder says Of course, we know what happens when you do that in present-day Canada, you lose your job National Post: Mountie who blew whistle could lose job Calgary Herald: Levant wins CA nod to run Ric Dolphin in Edmonton Journal: Liberals smell blood in Calgary riding CP: Troops from Edmonton say goodbye, board plane en route to Afghanistan Globe and Mail: Shirts prove old hat for our troops CP: Eggleton should be held in contempt for misleading Commons, opposition says Desmond Morton in Globe and Mail: Eggleton didn't want to know: That's war, folks Susan Riley in Ottawa Citizen: Art Eggleton's Armed Farces Ottawa Sun: Grit vows to keep forces Canadian Fox: Soldiers to Be Sent to U.S. Borders Montreal Gazette: Watched by CSIS Globe and Mail: Lobbyists under ethics review National Post: Liberals quash testimony of Gagliano accuser Chantal Hebert in Toronto Star: PM leads the way in distorting democracy Andrew Coyne in National Post: Welcome to the Liberal subculture National Post: 'We have done better than most'--Martin, Dodge talk up dollar on Wall Street; new figures show slow recovery in November Stratfor: A Strong U.S. Dollar Is Good Medicine Hope for the disabled Globe and Mail: Spinal implants give hope to disabled Hope for children CNS News: Bush Administration Classifies Fetus as 'Unborn Child' Here's the another version of events from the Canadian Glib-eral paper of record Toronto Star: Fetus is a `child,' Bush declares Peter Worthington in Toronto Sun: Just one voice--Peter Gzowski spoke well, but not for all of us Halifax Chronicle Herald: Mother wasn't drinking on night of crash Halifax Daily News: Authorities considering charges for false claims Washington Post: U.S. Repeats Warnings on Terrorism Linda Chavez in Washington Times: Forces of terrorism at home and abroad DEBKA via WorldNetDaily: U.S. making final break with Arafat? Sydney Morning Herald: No repatriation cash for Afghan refugees Collin Levey in WSJ: Beating the System--Feminists howl at a Kentucky judge's approach to domestic violence The postman always rings twice London Daily Telegraph: 'Weakest link' husband jailed for life David Limbaugh in WorldNetDaily: Yet more assaults on Christianity David Shiflet in WSJ: Depart Out!--A call for Christians to leave their churches--the End Times may be here Christianity Today: Film Forum: Intelligent Believers on the Big Screen? Howard Rosenberg in LA Times: Big Names, Little News--This Is CNN? Andrew Greeley in Chicago Sun Times: 'Sopranos' not fit for public consumption Atlantic Monthly: "Sir Walter Ralegh to His Son" News On the Web Archive report.ca Internet Edition Updated Daily Advertisement |
No, it appears to have a website. Just like the Onion. Whether its legit is another story. No sources, no quotes (from the culprits) no names.
Brave New World--Part 1 by Celeste McGovern
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Articles in the Feb. 4, 2002 issue of The Report but not available online: The wages of government medicine Soft steps to assimilation Healthcare shakeup LAW Harmless when not out of control Sympathy for the shaman Sue the government ECONOMICS To rock-bottom and back Deadly in more ways than ever before SOCIETY Sask Pen's porn and pizza party The 'sorry' state of history Religion for beginners Answers to bigots COLUMNS AND DEPARTMENTS |
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Any truth to this?
Please tell me no.
Pregnancy/abortion as doping
Pregnancy seems to increase muscle strength in female athletes. Female top athletes - just following the period, where they gave birth to their first child - have set several world records. Of course, this is acceptable as a natural and unintended event.
However, in some countries female athletes have become pregnant for 2-3 months, in order to improve their performance just following an abortion.
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