And yet you don't seem to recognize that there are people who take up weightlifting as athletic sport.
No, I realise that perfectly well. I'm just drawing a distinction between people who dedicatedly lift weights for the intent of entering competitions where they try to out-lift other people who also lift weights for competition, and people who just go into a gym to lift weights occasionally for general fitness, strength or muscle building. Which is basically repeating exactly what I said last comment in a slightly different fashion.
It has been estimated that in the UK, about 1-2% of the population are taking anabolic steroids outside prescription use. The stated reasons were (more than one could be picked, so they add up beyond 100%):
1) Develop body image (~55%)
2) Non-competitive bodybuilding (~45%)
3) Develop sporting / athletic performance (~25%)
4) Support occupational performance (~10%)
5) Increase sex drive (~10%)
Note the difference between (1)/(2) and (3).
To restate my original comment:
Contast with salbutamol (/albuterol) which is heavily restricted for professional athletes, but as it poses no significant abuse risk for the general public is just a regular prescription medicine.
I don't know, perhaps you'd care to explain why you're trying to derail a mention of a trans rights issue unique to trans men
Yes. I'm explaining what a sport is because you went on one of your rants after I pointed out that androgens were restricted because of abuse by the general public rather than by high level athletes. So if you want to know why this thread became so derailed: it's your fault.
Just to illustrate how you do this, when I brought up Stallone as a simple example of the 1980s popularisation of the hyper-muscled male image contributing to increased societal steroid use, you started a bizarre digression about precisely what year he became associated with action movies, and that it was only about 1985/1986 (as if that is somehow not the 1980s), etc. That's what you do when get this weird rush of blood to the head.
Don't think I haven't noticed you glossed straight over my point, which is that T is a controlled substance, and latched yourself onto my (entirely correct) contribution of its prohibition to professional athletics like a rhetorical remora to try to change the topic.
Controlled substance is anything the government puts a restriction on; this therefore means both prescription medicines and illegal drugs. Some of course (like heroin and some androgens) effectively exist as both, mostly depending on who makes, supplies and buys them.
Yes, that very media pressure that seems to have manifested directly from the luminiferous aether, entirely absent context, one fine day which spontaneously exploded into a bunch of people who non-competitively participate, for reasons that have nothing to do with social capitol, in something that isn't actually a sport, except for all the times it is, which just amazingly enough for you so happen to be all those times that would fundamentally contradict your argument.
The incredibly boring thing about this is you're arguing about almost nothing. We don't appear to disagree about unhealthy issues of body image that are fostered by idealised societal images. You just have this weird objection to me saying it goes further and deeper than professional sports. That is literally all it is.