Pubdate: Wed, 18 Aug 2004 Source: Surrey Now (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc., A Canwest Company Contact: http://www.thenownewspaper.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1462 Author: Jim McMurtry Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v04/n1169/a08.html CITY'S DRUG PROBLEM IS NO JOKE The Editor, Re: "Drug user takes hit for movie," the Now, Aug. 14. The documentary film Crackass: The Surrey Movie portrays victims of drug abuse and homelessness and should not be dismissed -though it is being dismissed, indeed outlawed by the Surrey school board. The board's manager of Safe Schools, Theresa Campbell, has declared: "We will be taking every measure possible to stop anyone from distributing any copies of Crackass in our schools." Since the school board spent close to $2 million defending its ban on three children's stories depicting same-sex parenting couples, its resolve is unquestioned. Yet why is the school board so determined to censor an amateur film that has not even been released? The furor prior to the release of Mel Gibson's film The Passion of the Christ only served to increase its audience. Marko, the director of Crackass, hopes his film will bring attention to social problems, such as the drug addiction which afflicts him. Opponents of his film appear to be placing their own moral anxieties above this quest, and the school board is denying students their educational right to know. To draw from the Canadian Association of University Teachers' constitution, "The common good of society depends on the search for knowledge and its free exposition." I hear so often that kids are growing up faster these days, but whether that's true or not, it is evident that they have still a lot to learn in order to protect themselves from dangers of sexual diseases, drug addiction and the like. This July I taught high school students at Queen Elizabeth secondary, and at the end of each day I rode past young prostitutes and other broken and degraded people on my bicycle ride home down the King George Highway. Many were openly drug users, like Marko, but seemingly without the blend of qualities that has moved him to reach out to others through his camera. The kids I teach would benefit from seeing his film, for it is very likely to deepen their understanding of life. At age 14 or 16 they already know that if there are man-eating tigers in the street, much better than locking the door, pulling the blinds and plastering bedroom walls with reassuring pictures of gentle animals, is to learn about the habits of tigers. Jim McMurtry Cloverdale - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin