I'm not a big picture guy, and I am a cynic. Granting those premises,
there is something I don't understand about Armstrong's confession,
specifically his motivation for doing so. His career was already over,
his family was already wrecked, his credibility was already shot, his
endorsement deals were already dried up. All that a verbal confession
does is open himself up for litigation (otherwise it would have been
his word against the words of everybody was actually was caught
doping, and no self-respecting judge would allow that in a courtroom).
If I wasn't a cynic, I'd say the guilt was simply gnawing away at him,
but I am and it wasn't. He certainly had a team of advisers, from
marketing scum to lawyer scum, telling him what he should do. So why
confess? What's in it for him?



-- 
Kevin M. (RPCV)

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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