News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Editorial: Time To Just Say 'No' To Anti-Drug Campaign |
Title: | US MA: Editorial: Time To Just Say 'No' To Anti-Drug Campaign |
Published On: | 2006-10-02 |
Source: | Republican, The (Springfield, MA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-13 01:35:25 |
TIME TO JUST SAY 'NO' TO ANTI-DRUG CAMPAIGN
Imagine The Following Tv Commercial:
A close-up shot of an egg. A narrator says, "This is your tax money."
Then the egg rolls onto the floor, smashing open. The narrator
continues: "And this is your tax money working to keep kids off drugs."
It might bring to mind a famous anti-drug spot. "This is your brain,"
a voice said as an egg was shown on screen. "And this is your brain
on drugs," he continued ominously as the egg was seen frying in a
sizzling skillet.
That public service announcement was fodder for many late-night
comedy sketches and countless jokes, but it may not have done a thing
to keep kids from trying illegal drugs. Decades later, anti-drug
advertisements continue to appear in print and on television, but
there is now evidence that they aren't working as intended. In fact,
one recent study has demonstrated that certain government-sponsored
anti-drug spots may have spurred some kids to say "yes" to dope.
This is your brain in a dither. And your tax dollars going down the drain.
Since 1998, the federal government has spent $1.2 billion on a media
campaign meant to keep kids from using drugs. When the Government
Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, decided to
try to gauge how the campaign had been working, the research firm it
hired came back with bad news. So the GAO ordered further review. And
Westat Inc., the research company, confirmed its earlier findings,
with the GAO then backing the results.
It is long past time to recognize that many elements of the so-called
war on drugs have failed. The taxpayer-funded media campaign is just
the latest to be declared a flop.
No one wants kids to use illegal drugs. No one wants them to
experiment with marijuana, to toy with pills, to become addicted to
cocaine or methamphetamine. But that does not mean that failed
efforts to keep kids off drugs should be blindly continued. If the
anti-drug media campaign isn't working - and there is every reason to
believe that it is not - then it should be discontinued. We can think
of lots of ways to spend another billion dollars. We'll start with
just one: more money for effective drug treatment programs.
The current plan has not been working. It's high time to choose a new course.
Imagine The Following Tv Commercial:
A close-up shot of an egg. A narrator says, "This is your tax money."
Then the egg rolls onto the floor, smashing open. The narrator
continues: "And this is your tax money working to keep kids off drugs."
It might bring to mind a famous anti-drug spot. "This is your brain,"
a voice said as an egg was shown on screen. "And this is your brain
on drugs," he continued ominously as the egg was seen frying in a
sizzling skillet.
That public service announcement was fodder for many late-night
comedy sketches and countless jokes, but it may not have done a thing
to keep kids from trying illegal drugs. Decades later, anti-drug
advertisements continue to appear in print and on television, but
there is now evidence that they aren't working as intended. In fact,
one recent study has demonstrated that certain government-sponsored
anti-drug spots may have spurred some kids to say "yes" to dope.
This is your brain in a dither. And your tax dollars going down the drain.
Since 1998, the federal government has spent $1.2 billion on a media
campaign meant to keep kids from using drugs. When the Government
Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, decided to
try to gauge how the campaign had been working, the research firm it
hired came back with bad news. So the GAO ordered further review. And
Westat Inc., the research company, confirmed its earlier findings,
with the GAO then backing the results.
It is long past time to recognize that many elements of the so-called
war on drugs have failed. The taxpayer-funded media campaign is just
the latest to be declared a flop.
No one wants kids to use illegal drugs. No one wants them to
experiment with marijuana, to toy with pills, to become addicted to
cocaine or methamphetamine. But that does not mean that failed
efforts to keep kids off drugs should be blindly continued. If the
anti-drug media campaign isn't working - and there is every reason to
believe that it is not - then it should be discontinued. We can think
of lots of ways to spend another billion dollars. We'll start with
just one: more money for effective drug treatment programs.
The current plan has not been working. It's high time to choose a new course.
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