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#61
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I realize some of the practical issues that you raise, but I think some people might think twice about doing certain things if they thought someone "was watching." Furthermore, I think that there are some trainers that we can both agree don't need to be as closely monitored as others, so it's probably not like you have to watch all 1500 horses all the time. But if there are suspicions of shenanigans, you do have somewhere to start. |
#62
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#63
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |
#64
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Not in reality.
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Just more nebulous nonsense from BBB |
#65
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#66
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If stuff like this happened in the stock market, you would have a line of lawyers filing class action suits and it would be a deterrant.. This doesn't work at the races as you have too many people that have been damaged to chase down and no paper trail to identify them... My thoughts on this whole drug thing and of course there are problems with this thought. We need the owners to put pressure on the trainers. Make no doubt about it , owners are not in the dark here they just choose to be. If a trainer tests positive (or multiple positives ?), ALL HORSES UNDER HIS CARE AT THE TIME OF THE CRIME should serve a suspension and not be allowed to run period for x number of days. No transferring to another trainer would be allowed, no moving to another track.... Owners would certainly put pressure on trainers to stay clean... Again there is a lot of things that would need to be worked out here such as what to do about overages on legal medications etc... |