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Two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Steve Breen is fast developing a reputation for provocative political cartoons that have captured the attention of some of the nation's premier publications. His cartoons regularly appear in The New York Times, USA Today, Newsweek and US News and World Report. His comic strip, Grand Avenue, appears in more than 150 newspapers across the country.
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Comments (13) (Please sign in to comment)
ossiningaling said, 7 months ago
Apparently there was a vast bike-wing conspiracy…
Respectful Troll said, 7 months ago
As one who has been a hopeful defender of Armstrong in the past, I admit my hopes have been dashed. It is good that professional sports are keeping blood and hair samples in cold storage as they do. As better tests are developed, we are able to catch cheaters after the fact. If it is true that Armstrong coerced his whole team to cheat or be cut from the team, I am even more disappointed. Armstrong has done much good with his Livestrong campaign and I have used recipes and health info from his website in improving my own health, but-
ENDS do NOT justify MEANS. It’s true in sports, politics, and life in general. If it can’t be done in honor, it should not be done. If it can’t be done in love, it can’t be done in the name of God. Or, for my atheists friends out there, humanity.
Respectfully, and with disappoinment,
C.
olfart said, 7 months ago
So did he fail a drug test or just fail the USAADA popularity contest?
jonesb said, 7 months ago
The popularity contest.
DavidGBA said, 7 months ago
Live Strong without drugs or Lance ?
ahab
said, 7 months ago
The “Tour de Farce” loses.
iamthelorax said, 7 months ago
I pretty much assumed he was guilty from the start and also assumed (quite correctly) that every cyclist behind him was taking the same juice. There are now no winners in this race and these people gained nothing from this blowhard exercise. It’s one thing to be an a-hole, it’s quite another when you end up being one without a point.
dtroutma
said, 7 months ago
Let’s make sure we tear down every individual who’s accomplished good in the world, it’s the “American way today”!
Dredpiraterobt$ said, 7 months ago
@olfart
“So did he fail a drug test …?”
.
Yes. They retested his blod samples with the new technology and found the EPO that he’d been using and masking (which was why he passed the tests at the time)
iamthelorax said, 7 months ago
Upon reflection, this cartoon is dumber the second time I look at it. Kids don’ care about cycle races and it’s not why people wear the bracelets. It’s about hope and living a full life with cancer. Acting as though the work he did to inspire people is negated because of this is wrong on so many levels.
Michael wme said, 7 months ago
@iamthelorax
I agree. A person who takes an illegal carcinogen, gets cancer, gets cured, and still has the determination to continue to take the illegal carcinogen so he can excel deserves our admiration.
iamthelorax said, 7 months ago
Name a sport, any sport. Every pro player is taking some form of performance enhancer. You can act superior if you want but I’ve been in oncology clinics too many times and more often than not someone tells the story of how he recovered and went on to win the race. He gives people hope and he deserves respect for that.
biemmezeta
said, 7 months ago
are you saying . . . stop giving to the cancer society?.
cartoon has unintended consequences