News (Media Awareness Project) - US NY: PUB LTE: End Prohibition |
Title: | US NY: PUB LTE: End Prohibition |
Published On: | 2002-05-08 |
Source: | Watertown Daily Times (NY) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-23 08:25:11 |
END PROHIBITION
End drug gangs. End prohibition. (Watertown Police Ready To Crack Down On
Gangs, 28 April).Look at their ages. They all should be DARE graduates.
(Tax payer tab-$700 million per year).
In January 1998, the Office of National Drug Control Policy began the
National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. Anti-drug ads dominated the
airwaves and television screen, appearing more than 445,000 times. Since
1998, the ads have reached 90 percent of minors at least seven times a
week. Is that a failure too? (Tax payer tab-$1 billion per year).
The previous article on the gangs stated " they come to Watertown because
the larger cities are saturated with drugs." That contradicts The Office of
National Drug Control Policy claims of "70% reduction in drug use since the
mid-80s".
When you have a drug policy that makes a 25 cent plant worth $8,000, drug
free or not, the big money looks good!
Unfortunately the rest of the article was predictable. The need for more
money for more law enforcement. More of what hasn't worked for the pass 30
years. The article goes on to blame the usual, parents, music, TV, without
looking at the real problem!
Prohibition!
Larry Seguin, Lisbon, New York
End drug gangs. End prohibition. (Watertown Police Ready To Crack Down On
Gangs, 28 April).Look at their ages. They all should be DARE graduates.
(Tax payer tab-$700 million per year).
In January 1998, the Office of National Drug Control Policy began the
National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. Anti-drug ads dominated the
airwaves and television screen, appearing more than 445,000 times. Since
1998, the ads have reached 90 percent of minors at least seven times a
week. Is that a failure too? (Tax payer tab-$1 billion per year).
The previous article on the gangs stated " they come to Watertown because
the larger cities are saturated with drugs." That contradicts The Office of
National Drug Control Policy claims of "70% reduction in drug use since the
mid-80s".
When you have a drug policy that makes a 25 cent plant worth $8,000, drug
free or not, the big money looks good!
Unfortunately the rest of the article was predictable. The need for more
money for more law enforcement. More of what hasn't worked for the pass 30
years. The article goes on to blame the usual, parents, music, TV, without
looking at the real problem!
Prohibition!
Larry Seguin, Lisbon, New York
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