Pubdate: Wed, 05 Feb 2003 Source: Arka Tech (AR Edu) Copyright: 2003 Arka Tech Contact: http://arkatech.atu.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2790 Author: Nicholas B. Morris, Staff Writer DRUG COMMERCIALS FILLED WITH FALSE INFORMATION CAUSES EXTREME HATRED Disclaimer: I do not condone the use of any illegal substance. All opinions stated in this column are based on the extreme hatred of false information. That being said, few things make me as mad as the current anti-drug campaigns, for no other reason than the fact that they are filled with false information. I have known a lot of people who have smoked pot at some point in their life, and none of them have ever shot anyone, ran over a little girl on her bicycle, or ran into a brick wall at sixtyEmiles an hour. Here are the facts: marijuana might make you stupid. I've met a few burnouts in my day. It will probably give you an appetite for junk food - anyone who has ever watched a movie with pot smokers in it could tell you that. But the chances of killing someone after smoking pot are nonexistent. But a group campaigning with the word "knowledge" tagged onto their commercials has seemingly ignored common knowledge in hopes to spread ignorance and lies about the use of the illegal substance marijuana. Just one quick example: these would-be informative sources show a group of guys smoking marijuana at a concert, then getting arrested. Reality check: that never happens. I've been to quite a few concerts in my lifetime and I have never seen anyone arrested for smoking pot at a concert. I've seen out of control drunks get arrested, but I've never seen the cops busting someone who was puffing the magic dragon. Most concerts I've been to, the cops just looked the other way, because it wasn't the pot smokers who were causing trouble. In closing, I'm not against all anti-drug campaigns. To tell you the truth, there are some I'm quite fond of. The one where the kid is dressed "weird" (for lack of a better term) and the parents ask him about where he's going and what he's doing is one of the best. The slogan on that commercial is "Let your kids be themselves, but know what they're doing" (or something to that effect). I think that that is a wonderful message to send to America's youth - "you can be yourself and we won't judge you - also, drugs can make you stupid, so watch out." To me, that seems a lot better than blowing the facts out of proportion. - --- MAP posted-by: Alex