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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Ivanchuk to be banned from chess? (Read 35247 times)
Antillian
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #79 - 01/28/09 at 20:30:44
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Willempie wrote on 01/28/09 at 09:09:41:
And unsurprisingly FIDE chickened out. 
Must be nice for those players who were banned...


What? FIDE did an about turn? In other news, a dog bit a man.
  

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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #78 - 01/28/09 at 09:09:41
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And unsurprisingly FIDE chickened out. 
Must be nice for those players who were banned...
  

If nothing else works, a total pig-headed unwillingness to look facts in the face will see us through.
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #77 - 12/07/08 at 22:03:06
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Taking the doping test wouldn't have been lifethreatening to Ivanchuk or to any other person. 


Neither would swearing my allegiance to the United States, keeping silent rather than speaking out against those in power, or opening my house to the police anytime they want to search it.  But I refuse to do these things, and though I might not have the courage to uphold my refusal unto death, I would like to think that I did.
  

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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #76 - 12/07/08 at 21:52:44
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SWJediknight wrote on 12/06/08 at 11:31:10:
Just had to say, it's not often that I see an insightful post on this topic and agree 100% with it- but that's what happened with Paddy's post, matching my thoughts exactly.


Mine too.
  

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Stigma
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #75 - 12/07/08 at 19:08:53
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MNb wrote on 12/06/08 at 21:59:09:

Since when are dictators interested in logical arguments? 

At least if you try you can often see the reasoning behind even a dictator's actions, unless he is literally mentally ill. What's twisted compared to ordinary decent people is the motives behind those actions. While you apparently are not interested in this, I've tried to understand Iljumzhinov's motivations and concluded (like LeeRoth) that FIDE will probably give as mild a punishment to Ivanchuk as possible, or even none at all if they can get away with that without damaging their relations with the IOC. Just this seems to be about to happen - see f.ex. some comments on this Dalily Dirt post 

http://www.chessninja.com/dailydirt/2008/12/this-is-your-federation-on-drugs.htm...

If the Ukrainian federation is to be believed, Ivanchuk has been given a full three months (!) to come to his senses and submit to a doping test. Laughable in the context of actually finding some drug relevant to his Olympiad performance, but if it pleases the IOC...

Probably I should read Sartre, I will see if I can find that book. But if the practical consequences of intellectual integrity is the issue, I argue (for the nth time) that opposing this drug policy is unlikely to lead to any practical change. LeeRoth's point that FIDE member federations currently receive economic support from the IOC (or national olympic committees), only strengthens me in this belief.

So why don't we direct our energies to protesting the sudden, unlawful changes to the WCh cycle instead? That's a battle where all the arguments as well as the interests of many top players go against FIDE. I really find it a bit ironic that you're accusing me of ignoring the practical consequences here.
« Last Edit: 12/07/08 at 20:41:36 by Stigma »  

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LeeRoth
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #74 - 12/07/08 at 17:03:16
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So what should FIDE do about Ivanchuk?

There's been hysteria about disqualifying Ivanchuk's results and/or banning him for two years.  Both penalties are described in the doping rules, but I don't see anything in those rules that requires either of those actions.  

Firstly, the doping rules don't say that they "must" disqualify a violator, only that they "may."  That suggests that there is room for discretion and, in my view, FIDE ought to consider the affect a disqualification will have on others.  This is a team event, not an individual event, and its one thing to disqualify someone when it only hurts them; its quite another to do so if it penalizes innocent teammates.  Even in the case of an individual event, it seems to me that you also have to consider the effect on other participants.  Here, disqualifying Ivanchuk would penalize not just his team, but whole other teams, since the Bronze medal would have to be reassigned.  That result would be ridiculous, which means that disqualification should really be out of the question.

Secondly and as to the two-year ban, its pretty clear that the two year ban is designed to punish players who are caught using or attempting to use prohibited substances.  No one is accusing Ivanchuk of that.  From the accounts of what happened, his intent in skipping the test was not to evade a negative finding; he was simply upset over his last round loss and stormed off.  His conduct may have been petulant, but it should not be criminalized.  Banning him for two years would be way over the top and unjustified.  
 
I think its pretty obvious that the punishment should fit the crime, and should be relatively light.  A slap on the wrist is all that's necessary here.

  
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LeeRoth
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #73 - 12/07/08 at 16:37:07
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The facts seem to be getting lost in the shuffle.   

As I understand it, FIDE's implementation of the drug-testing policy is NOT because (i) FIDE is trying to maintain a level-playing field by banning substances that might or might not improve one's chess or (ii) to protect the health of the players.

Rather, the drug testing policy is done to keep the IOC happy, and not simply because chess hopes to one day become an olympic sport, but because today, in the here and now, the IOC is giving substantial sums of money to various chess federations.

If this is true, then putting all the moralizing aside, the choice is basically a simple one.  FIDE either says no thanks to the IOC's largesse or it asks players to submit to a drug test.   

The other thing in all this is that I haven't seen Ivanchuk say that he refused the drug test on grounds of personal privacy, etc.  And for him to now take that position would seem a bit of a dodge, since he agreed ahead of time to the drug testing -- and while he perhaps didn't have a choice if he wanted to play -- I don't recall any protest or objection about it then. 

From the reports thus far, it sounds like Ivanchuk was distraught after losing to Kamsky, and ran off either forgetting to take the test or intentionally skipping it on the ground that, well, he just didn't feel like it.  If that's indeed the case, then its a violation, and he should be penalized.   

As to that, I will post separately. 



  
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #72 - 12/07/08 at 14:15:16
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Mnb, I don't think your comparison with the soviet composer applys here. The soviet union tried to force the composer to lead a life in accordance to their system. The FIDE wants the chess player just to devote his time for a short moment to their test and then it's over.

MNb wrote on 12/07/08 at 12:44:38:
Quote:
Taking the doping test wouldn't have been lifethreatening to Ivanchuk or to any other person.


Do you really want me to give a whole list of non-lifethreatening examples from all kind of dictatures? I'll give you one. In the Soviet-Union Ustvolskaja was not permitted to compose the music she wanted. Her punishment was a lifelong boycott by Sovjet-government; she had to live in poor circumstances. Your advise to her is: give up your music and start composing socialistic-realistic hymns - the path Sjostakovitsj and Khatsaturian choose.
There never has been a proper debate within FIDE on the subject of doping tests; neither is there any democratic way to get rid of the
anti-doping policy. I have declared before that I am not happy with Ivanchuk being the anti-FIDE icon; but in the end all these considerations are irrelevant. Those who support FIDE's policy and Ivanchuk's ban also support violating the political rights of Timman, Ivanchuk etcetera. Attempts to disconnect these two issues fail because Iljumzjinov won't.

In other words: in the times of Euwe and Olafsson I would have been with Cyronix, but not now.

  
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MNb
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #71 - 12/07/08 at 12:44:38
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Quote:
Taking the doping test wouldn't have been lifethreatening to Ivanchuk or to any other person.


Do you really want me to give a whole list of non-lifethreatening examples from all kind of dictatures? I'll give you one. In the Soviet-Union Ustvolskaja was not permitted to compose the music she wanted. Her punishment was a lifelong boycott by Sovjet-government; she had to live in poor circumstances. Your advise to her is: give up your music and start composing socialistic-realistic hymns - the path Sjostakovitsj and Khatsaturian choose.
There never has been a proper debate within FIDE on the subject of doping tests; neither is there any democratic way to get rid of the
anti-doping policy. I have declared before that I am not happy with Ivanchuk being the anti-FIDE icon; but in the end all these considerations are irrelevant. Those who support FIDE's policy and Ivanchuk's ban also support violating the political rights of Timman, Ivanchuk etcetera. Attempts to disconnect these two issues fail because Iljumzjinov won't.

In other words: in the times of Euwe and Olafsson I would have been with Cyronix, but not now.
  

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cyronix
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #70 - 12/07/08 at 09:50:18
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You also have to understand in what context the saying "rules are rules" is used. Taking the doping test wouldn't have been lifethreatening to Ivanchuk or to any other person. I could have understood the denial of the test, if it was dangerous for him, but it was not, Ivanchuk just didn't feel like going there, so it was simply an offense to the organizer, and so the organizer may punish him. If you agree to participate in a tournament, you also agree to the rules of the tournament.
Still, not taking the doping test in a chess tournament, is not unfair to any other player (drugs have not been proven to be useful for chess afaik) and didn't disturb the process of the tournament. 
The doping test is just a measure from the FIDE, to make chess compatible to an olympic sport, but normally only physical sports become olympic, but chess is a pure mindgame, so chess is very unlikely to become olympic, so it is questionable if a dopingtest is really needed. So the rule violation is not critical, the organizer is allowed to punish him, but not severly.

  
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MNb
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #69 - 12/06/08 at 21:59:09
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Stigma wrote on 12/06/08 at 16:08:49:
MNb wrote on 12/06/08 at 15:37:22:

The point you have missed with the Mugabe comparison is of course that Mugabe can be expected to use these speed limits to get a firmer grip on his political opponents and to benefit his supporters. So good luck with your support.

I see that problem of course, but that attitude will get you nowhere in a logical argument on the issues (as I thought we were having here), and also nowhere in concrete negotiations with a corrupt regime. "I'm going to disregard all the arguments pro and contra, and simply oppose every decision you make in principle because you're a dictator" - good luck with that stance in the pragmatic world of (real or sports) politics. 

And as I said this is also a matter of intellectual honesty: We can't change our opinions back and forth based on whether they happen to be shared by some dictator somewhere. I heard that Hitler was for animal rights for example, but obviously (if true) that in itself is not an argument against animal rights! Likewise in the hypothetical Mugabe example, the speed limits themselves are a seperate issue from whether those limits will be used to supress opponents. You can be either for or against the speed limits, and either for or against (hopefully against!) their corrupt use, but those are separate and logically independent questions.

You might find yourself in the absurd position of being against speed limits when Mugabe suggests them, but for them if the opposition takes over power and chooses to keep them, with the exact same arguments.


Since when are dictators interested in logical arguments? As this is my last post on the subject - I've said all I had to say and begin to repeat myself - I'll permit myself one reference to Nazi-Germany. In the period before 1939 many intellectuals were busy with logical arguments; in the meantime Hitler prepared for war.
You might find yourself in a position that to save your precious intellectual integrity you back a policy that violates the fundamental rights of the dicator's political opponents, even when that policy itself seems right. May I advise you to read Sartre's Les mains sales (Dirty hands) on this subject? Sartre shows here convincingly what happens when you are too much concerned about intellectual integrity disregarding its practical consequences - your hands might get even dirtier.  Lips Sealed
  

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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #68 - 12/06/08 at 16:26:06
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Stigma wrote on 12/06/08 at 16:08:49:
I see that problem of course, but that attitude will get you nowhere in a logical argument on the issues (as I thought we were having here), and also nowhere in concrete negotiations with a corrupt regime. "I'm going to disregard all the arguments pro and contra, and simply oppose every decision you make in principle because you're a dictator" - good luck with that attitude in the pragmatic world of (real or sports) politics.

There's a big difference between supporting a position and not agreeing with the opposite position. There's no need to support FIDE, while you can still choose not to support Chucky on this issue.

Personally I cant think of any reason to ban doping in chess. If it is dangerous for the chessplayer then the country where he resides will most likely have laws on those particular substances (eg cocaine is illegal in every country I am aware of). 
If the reason is that it is deemed unfair I can follow that line of reasoning, though I disagree. With that line of reasoning one could ban the use of glasses as they give the player a better view of the board, which he otherwise wouldnt have had. 

Come to think of it, all matches of late have been won by a person wearing glasses, so maybe there is something to it...
  

If nothing else works, a total pig-headed unwillingness to look facts in the face will see us through.
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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #67 - 12/06/08 at 16:08:49
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MNb wrote on 12/06/08 at 15:37:22:

The point you have missed with the Mugabe comparison is of course that Mugabe can be expected to use these speed limits to get a firmer grip on his political opponents and to benefit his supporters. So good luck with your support.

I see that problem of course, but that attitude will get you nowhere in a logical argument on the issues (as I thought we were having here), and also nowhere in concrete negotiations with a corrupt regime. "I'm going to disregard all the arguments pro and contra, and simply oppose every decision you make in principle because you're a dictator" - good luck with that stance in the pragmatic world of (real or sports) politics. 

And as I said this is also a matter of intellectual honesty: We can't change our opinions back and forth based on whether they happen to be shared by some dictator somewhere. I heard that Hitler was for animal rights for example, but obviously (if true) that in itself is not an argument against animal rights! Likewise in the hypothetical Mugabe example, the speed limits themselves are a seperate issue from whether those limits will be used to supress opponents. You can be either for or against the speed limits, and either for or against (hopefully against!) their corrupt use, but those are separate and logically independent questions.

You might find yourself in the absurd position of being against speed limits when Mugabe suggests them, but for them if the opposition takes over power and chooses to keep them, with the exact same arguments.
  

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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #66 - 12/06/08 at 15:37:22
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Stigma wrote on 12/05/08 at 03:11:15:
Anyway if you pick this issue as the one that should end this corrupt remige, you will alomst certainly be disappointed, for here for once FIDE have some pretty good arguments on their side. You would have more chances of real change if you 1) took FIDEs point of view into account (if only to defeat them) and 2) picked a battle with more realistic winning chances.


The choice alas is not up to me. And Iljumzjinov seems have realized it as well:

Quote:
Ivanchuk Update
Summarizing various bits of information from Chess Today, it looks like the following is what will happen: FIDE will meet with Ivanchuk during the Wijk aan Zee tournament (in January) to discuss the matter, and at some point the FIDE Medical Commission will make a decision. So we don't need to panic just yet about Ivanchuk's future.


From IM's Monokroussos' site.
I would like to ask you to study the events regarding doping in Tour de France and Giro d'Italia last few years. It can't be denied that the consequence has been chaotical. And the people who executed this policy in cycling (the boards and also Hein Verbruggen) are much more reliable than Iljumzjinov.
The point you have missed with the Mugabe comparison is of course that Mugabe can be expected to use these speed limits to get a firmer grip on his political opponents and to benefit his supporters. So good luck with your support.
  

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Re: Ivanchuk to be banned from chess?
Reply #65 - 12/06/08 at 11:31:10
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Just had to say, it's not often that I see an insightful post on this topic and agree 100% with it- but that's what happened with Paddy's post, matching my thoughts exactly.
  
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