Pubdate: Thu, 10 Oct 2002
Source: Iowa State Daily (IA Edu)
Copyright: 2002, Iowa State Daily
Contact:  http://www.iowastatedaily.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1227
Author: Zach Calef
Note: Zach Calef is a junior in apparel merchandising design and production 
from Cedar Rapids. He is a member of the Daily's editorial board.

COMMENTARY: KEEP CHILDREN'S DRUG EDUCATION FROM GOING TO POT

Drug Czar John Walters and groups such as Freevibe have stepped up the 
campaign to prevent children from using drugs. This year a total of $180 
million will be spent by the federal government to pay for commercials that 
Walters said give viewers "tangible, real-world examples of what can go 
wrong when teens use marijuana."

The money will be wasted. The government and some groups are not educating 
the public with the ads, they are trying to scare the public with far-out 
propaganda.

First things first. I want to keep kids off drugs as much as anyone, 
whether it's marijuana, nicotine or alcohol. Their bodies cannot handle it 
and they are probably not mature enough to use them anyway. By attacking 
these ads, I am not endorsing child drug use, but somehow, someone will 
accuse me of doing just that.

The latest "real life" situation is the most ridiculous of any yet. 
Freevibe is the organization behind it.

Two young boys are sitting around smoking a water bong in a parent's 
office. As they are talking, one  sitting behind a desk finds a hand gun. 
He picks it up and the other boy, sitting across from him, asks if the gun 
is loaded. The kid with the gun points at the other boy, says no and pulls 
the trigger. Turns out the gun was loaded after all. The ad then reads 
marijuana "distorts reality."

This is insane. How often does this happen? Thanks for the "tangible" 
example, Walters. You probably saved countless lives. Wrong. That situation 
showed something a little worse than a distortion of reality - that showed 
a kid who didn't respect a gun. They threw pot in there to scare some idiot 
into believing that if their kid smokes pot, they might shoot someone.

It's brainwashing of a sort. They are associating pot and guns with one 
another. We all know they go hand in hand, drugs and guns. All the 
commercial needs to be complete is a hooker.

The fact is, the situation shown is probably not going to happen. When 
someone smokes pot, their reality isn't distorted in that sense. Anyone who 
has smoked weed can tell you the last thing on your mind when you get high 
is picking up a gun and pulling the trigger. Something to think about is 
another negative side effect the government has told us about - severe 
paranoia. According to their info, that kid should have been too scared to 
pick the gun up anyway.

How about the commercials that link smoking a damn joint to supporting 
terrorism?

If any one is politicizing the war on terror it is the Office of National 
Drug Control Policy. We all remember the Super Bowl ad that told us if we 
use drugs we might support terror.

There is a new one out that tries to hit home a little harder.

This commercial starts showing a guy named Dan and his joint.

Then the dealer Dan bought the joint from. Then the smuggler that smuggled 
the weed to the dealer. And finally, a family that was murdered by Dan's 
cartel when they got in the way.

It isn't Dan's fault those people were killed. Some one else would have 
smoked that joint if he wouldn't have. If we want to start placing blame on 
people other than the killers, let's look at Walters himself. If the drug 
wasn't illegal, there wouldn't need to be a cartel in the first place.

What we have here is a government that wants us all to believe what isn't 
true. And it will backfire on them hard-core. When these kids we are trying 
to keep off drugs realize they were fed a bunch of crap, they won't listen 
to the things they should know. Things that are true. So how do we keep 
kids off drugs? Tell them the truth.

Not all the commercials we've seen lie. In one a narrator tells how upset a 
kid's parents will get if they find out. This is a good idea. Most kids 
don't want to be in trouble with their parents and parents tend to get 
upset when their kids use drugs. It's all true.

I have even come up with a commercial idea myself. Remember, I am worried 
about children. Marijuana use at a young age is much, much more likely to 
lead to a dependency on the drug. Explain to them why - and here's the 
kicker, marijuana is more addictive for junior high kids than cocaine is, 
according to an article on NewScientist.com. That might actually make some 
one think twice about smoking at such a young age.

The point is we need to educate kids to understand they shouldn't use 
drugs, not try to scare the crap out of the American public.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart