Steroid grandfather still physically and mentally muscular

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  • liftsiron
    Administrator
    • Nov 2003
    • 18446

    Steroid grandfather still physically and mentally muscular

    Posted by basskiller on WCBB
    Steroid grandfather still physically and mentally muscular

    Now while this article is a bit dated (Jul. 9, 2006) I just found it interesting and enjoyed reading it.. The guy got an extreme sentance and I love the way the feds operate.. Take this or we'll do that.. anyways..enjoy ~basskiller

    written by E.J. Montini
    I met Robert Clapp in the summer of 1991, a few days after a task force of federal, state and local police busted down the door of his Paradise Valley home and hauled him off in cuffs. They may have needed to use two pairs, owing to the size of Clapp's arms and chest.

    Back then, he was dubbed the "Grandfather of Steroids" and was the biggest fish to be netted in a high-profile investigation that authorities called "Operation 'Roid Raid."

    Clapp was 57 years old at the time and readily admitted to having used steroids for over 30 years. The former schoolteacher didn't operate from some dark alley like a crack dealer. For the most part, he was out in the open about being on "the juice." advertisement




    As a result of the big bust, Clapp accepted a plea bargain from prosecutors for 27 months in federal prison. Primarily, he said, because the feds threatened to put his wife in jail on a tax charge if he didn't.

    In '91 he told me, "I'm hoping people might just look at me and say, 'Here's a man who has taken anabolic steroids for 33 years and look at him.' From what you hear, I should have been dead at 40. But I'm not. I've put anabolic steroids into my body for over 30 years. I'm not violent. I've got children and grandchildren. All the parts of my body work."

    Fifteen years ago, I remember thinking, "This guy could tear me limb from limb."

    Well, things have changed.

    Clapp is an even older grandfather now. And I'd have to say, "This guy could tear me limb from limb . . . with one hand."

    But that wouldn't happen, because as Clapp points out, he has never had what some call a " 'roid rage."

    "Unfortunately," he said, "all that we've done is to demonize steroids. It's tragic."

    Earlier this month, one of the foremost experts on steroids, Penn State Professor Charles Yesalis, told an interviewer, "It's a shame to say, but we have no idea (about possible long-term effects of steroids.) There have been long-term studies done on alcohol and a variety of drugs like marijuana and heroin but never on steroids."

    "We're out there," Clapp said. "There are guys like me who became involved in steroid use in the 1950s and '60s. And we're still here. There are quite a few of us. If researchers really wanted to study this they could. But we've put such a cloud over the issue that it becomes impossible for anyone to step forward and say that there is another side to the story."

    Clapp has come to take a philosophical view on the subject. It's not so much about steroids anymore, he said, but about what he calls "body sovereignty."

    "It's hard for me to agree that anyone should have control over our bodies," he said. "And things are changing. Steroids are being used. We just use different terms like 'hormone replacement therapy.' It takes time to change people's minds."

    In the meantime, he enjoys his family. He follows the football careers of his grandsons. And he finds the steroid scandal in baseball amusing. He said that while Barry Bonds is made the personification of a cheater, others are given free rides. By way of example he points to one of the most famous home runs in baseball history. It was struck in the 1988 World Series by Kirk Gibson of the Dodgers, who received a cortisone shot before the game.

    "Another steroid," Clapp said.

    Last week, researchers in Australia released a study suggesting that anabolic steroids help older people recover from joint replacement surgery. This, too, makes Clapp chuckle. After more than 40 years on "the juice," his joints are doing fine.
    __________________
    ADMIN/OWNER@Peak-Muscle
  • beefeatr

    #2
    Physical strength scares people who have no desire to improve their bodies. When we as humans are afraid of something we kill it or demonize it.
    I wonder how many people who think steroids are evil cheat on their taxes, their wives, their homework, or at golf.

    Comment

    • SurferBill

      #3
      Nice article and interview.

      Comment

      • John Benz
        Vet
        • Jan 2004
        • 3208

        #4
        That's very impressive and Clapp has undoubtedly used common sense and discipline, unlike so many who suffer the dire consequences of years of steroid abuse.

        Comment

        • Deacon
          Vet
          • Jan 2005
          • 3686

          #5
          he still looks good to
          Originally Posted by Doink the clown;
          "Every gym has the tard who never gets bigger,never shuts up,and never goes away!"


          "If you say you are not afraid to die either your lying or your a Ghurka,"

          "Amatures built the Ark - professionals built the Titanic."

          Comment

          • Lokedogg
            Vet
            • Jan 2008
            • 1113

            #6
            I am so sickened by the collective ignorance and stupidity of the human race. Injustice after Injustice easily perpetuated because people are too lazy to think for themselves. Most people like to come up with an in the box saying that they don't stray from. Ie. " I keep my friends close but my enemies closer." Simple minded laziness make it easy for the powers that be. And this sums up the bullshit drug laws- Jimmy Carter: "Penalties against possession of a drug should not be more damaging to an individual that the use of the drug itself, and where they are they should be changed."

            Comment

            • Scotsmark
              VET
              • Apr 2005
              • 956

              #7
              Stories and articles like these will always come out but the law won't change. The old men & women who run your country are so obsessed about demonizing AAS that none of us on here will see any changes in our lifetimes.

              My take on this is that, as there are so any people in UG labs making gear and so many others importing pharm grade from abroad, the US Govt will never be able to put a tax on gear and control it. Sam as marijuana, same as heroin, how the hell do you you explian alcohol & tobacco being consumer products - TAX!

              Don't listen to uneducated hysteria about gear, just be careful and don't get caught!

              Comment

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