"In one year,
the beer industry spends three times more on TV advertising
than McCaffrey has to spend on all media.
See
Toronto
Students Use Less Marijuana, More Alcohol and Solvents Gasoline! Who Says
Prohibition Doesnt Work?
From the San Francisco Examiner
Op-ed Page
letters@examiner.comhttp://www.examiner.com
July 31, 1998
(Ed. note: Of course, marijuana hardly begins to register on the
same scale with alcohol and other drugs, but it remains the focus of most of the
prohibitionist propaganda. This writer clearly has her priorities straight. Shell
never make it to Washington.)
A "WAR ON DRUGS" -- BUT ONLY A MURMUR ON BOOZE
HILARY ABRAMSON
©1998 San Francisco Examiner
AFTER football star Don Rogers and college basketball sensation Len Bias died within a
week of each other a decade ago from cocaine overdoses, the president of the United States
declared "war" on illegal drugs.
Then Congress OKd an unprecedented taxpayer-funded social marketing advertising
campaign to discourage minors from using pot, smack, crack and other illegal drugs through
a $1 billion, five-year media blitz commanded by a retired general, drug czar Barry
McCaffrey.
In contrast, in the wake of seven publicized college
binge-drinking deaths last year, Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala
didnt declare war on booze. Instead, she asked the governing board of college
athletics to adopt voluntary restrictions on college alcohol advertising.
To public health advocates, its just politics as usual.
Alcohol industry political action committees have already given members of Congress $1
million in the past (off-election) year. It is hardly a surprise that alcohol will receive
mere public service announcement status in the illegal drug media campaign, although
alcohol is more dangerous and costly to society than illegal drugs:
- Every day, on average, 11,318 American young people (12 to 20 years of age) try alcohol
for the first time, 6,488 try marijuana for the first time, 2,786 try cocaine for the
first time and 386 try heroin for the first time.
- Alcohol is a factor in three leading causes of death for 15 to 24 year olds. Two to three times as many teenagers and young adults die in
alcohol-related traffic crashes as do from illegal drugs.
- While 2 percent of high school students used heroin last year, 31 percent of 12th
graders admitted to having been intoxicated one or more times in the month
before
the annual University of Michigan "Monitoring the Future" study. Binge drinking
(consuming five or more drinks in a row) was reported by 31.3
percent of high school seniors, 25.1 percent of 10th graders, and 14.5 percent
of eighth graders.
Illegal drugs kill about 14,000 people a year at an annual
cost to taxpayers of about $70 billion. Three-quarters of the expense is related to crime
and law enforcement; one-quarter is health-related.
Alcohol kills about 100,000 people annually at a cost to taxpayers of about $99 billion
a year. Eighty percent of this cost is health-related. Nearly 2,000 Americans were killed
by teenage drunken drivers last year.
The Partnership for a Drug-Free America is the advertising agency group that originally took Big Tobacco and Big Booze money and failed to produce one
ad to discourage children from smoking or drinking. It is McCaffreys partner
in producing free ads scheduled for prime-time television.
Campaign architects contend they have negotiated with stations to broadcast public
service announcements against underage drinking. But bets are off on how many will appear
in prime time with the showbiz production quality of the illegal drug ads.
If Congress had to fund this experiment, it should have centered
on kids first drug of choice - alcohol - and been based in research.
Demonizing the illegal drugs and glamorizing the legal drug is wasting taxpayer money. What
good do a few public service announcements do when shown against a backdrop of beer ads
celebrating the wonders of alcohol?
In one year, the beer industry spends three times more on
TV advertising than McCaffrey has to spend on all media.
Social marketing can work, but research shows that a media campaign should tie in with
community-based activities. This one doesnt (and the federal government has cut its
support of local prevention work).
At the core of the drug-war campaign are parents talking to kids about drugs. That may
feel good, but research doesnt support it as a successful prevention strategy.
Last January, McCaffrey kicked off the test phase of the
campaign in Denver by saying, "The most dangerous person in the United States is a
12-year-old smoking marijuana."
(Ed. note: The Czar later amended this to include beer
and cigarettes, but that did not change the emphasis on anti-marijuana propaganda.) See
Drug
Bizarro McCaffrey Says Marijuana Is "Most Dangerous" DrugAlong With Beer
and Cigarettes
It hardly helps to learn from a recent Adweek interview that he is basing this
taxpayer gamble on his "gut feeling" that advertising works - because it worked
for the Army.
Examiner contributor Hilary Abramson, a San Francisco journalist, writes for
publications of the Marin Institute for the Prevention of Alcohol and Other Drug Problems.
©1998 San Francisco Examiner
|