Pubdate: Fri, 31 Jan 2003 Source: Review, The (DE Edu) Copyright: 2003 The Review Contact: http://www.review.udel.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1276 Author: James Borden ANTI-POT ADS ARE LAUGHABLE This Super Bowl marked the debut of yet another mindless continuation in the ongoing anti-marijuana advertising campaign. This commercial starts off looking like it's for a home pregnancy kit -- a young couple is in the bathroom, holding a pregnancy tester, nervously awaiting the results. Slowly, the camera pans away to show a young girl huddled on a bed crying; the words "They will be the youngest grandparents in town" flash across the screen. The commercial ends with a voiceover stating, "Marijuana impairs your judgment. It's more harmful than we all thought," while the phrase "Knowledge, the anti-drug" is displayed in the background. It seems the only goal of this ongoing campaign is to top the previous commercials, in terms of how ridiculous, unfounded and unbelievable they are. The Web site for the sponsor of these ads, Freevibe, goes for a hip, we're-cool-so-kids-please-listen-to-us look, with stylized graphics and photos. The site also attempts to explain the baffling logic behind such commercials as the teen pregnancy one. The page begins "You've heard it before, someone goes out, gets high on marijuana, lowers their boundaries and does something they really, really regret afterwards. "Unfortunately, this happens more than you think." I'm sorry, but the last time I heard of someone getting high and doing something they regretted the next day, it involved ordering one slice of pizza too many, or laughing in someone's face because they were too high to control themselves. Truth be told, I've never heard of weed being an aphrodisiac before; for most, it has the opposite effect. In fact, an old anti-marijuana campaign, based on different lies and even more outrageous claims once said that smoking marijuana could lower a man's sperm count, and even make him "turn homosexual." Personally, I don't know any homosexuals who go out there and impregnate young teenage girls, or, as was implied in one commercial, get a girl so high that she passes out so that he can fondle her unconscious body. Usually, that's what happens with alcohol. Back to Freevibe. The three reasons it lists for marijuana being linked to pregnancy are as follows: 1. Teens who use drugs are five times more likely to have sex than are those teens who do not use drugs. 2. Teens who have used marijuana are four times more likely to have been pregnant or to have gotten someone pregnant than teens who have never smoked pot. 3. More than one third of sexually active teens and young adults report that alcohol or drug use has influenced a decision to do something sexual. Clearly, no one running this site has ever taken a basic psychology class and learned of the problem between correlation and causation. An example -- some serial killers own dogs. If I were with Freevibe, I could then say that owning a dog makes you more likely to become a serial killer. Concerning their statistics however, was it ever taken into consideration that maybe, just maybe, the type of teen who goes out and gets pregnant is also the type of teen who would experiment with drugs? One did not cause the other, rather, they were the reckless, rebellious type who didn't stay home on Saturday nights to watch TV with mom and dad. Interestingly enough, reason number three mentions alcohol -- surely a much bigger factor in teen pregnancy, domestic violence, destruction of the family and overall deterioration of society as a whole than marijuana. But where are the anti-booze ads? Save for the "drink responsibly" message tossed into the last 2 seconds of a beer commercial, I don't remember the government telling me what I'm supposed to think about drinking, except that it's only OK if I'm 21. Although bizarre, the teen pregnancy ad was good for a laugh. But it's still not my favorite anti-drug commercial, a title still held by the one where a bunch of kids are sitting in the parking lot of a fast food restaurant getting high and ordering food -- until one day they run out of money. (Running out of money is a real problem when it comes to taking illegal drugs; why don't they ever touch on this?) So anyway, the kids run out of money and speed out of the parking lot, running over a little girl on her bike on the way out. The first time I saw this was before a movie, and even though it earned me dirty looks from most of the other patrons, I laughed my head off. This commercial was so unrealistic, and, not to mention, had so little to do with problems associated with drug abuse, that I had no choice. Last time I checked, people on cell phones are a lot more dangerous behind the wheel than people smoking blunts. I'm not saying that marijuana is a safe drug, though it is better than alcohol, and come to think of it, if everyone who went out and got drunk just got high instead, the world would be a better place. But this isn't the issue. The government spends millions of dollars on commercials that either make no sense or have no effect on people. Why don't they point out some of the actual, scientific problems associated with weed? Like, it can trigger depression, bring about schizophrenia (in those already prone to the disease) and cause respiratory and heart problems. The "Truth" anti-tobacco campaign has been effective because it focuses on real facts, real statistics and real problems, not fictitious events too outrageous to even be considered urban legends. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex