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| | #1 |
| Seasoned Activist ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Mar 2002
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| 'Straight Scoop' or straightjacket? The Straight Scoop News Bureau, run by the Office of National Drug Control Policy, is light on facts and long on myths about marijuana 11-22-2004 | Bill Berkowitz | WorkingForChange.com Over the past several years, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy has been peppering the airwaves with a bevy of anti-marijuana advertisements aimed specifically at teenagers and their parents. Advertisements created by high-powered public relations firms have tied marijuana use to terrorism, date rape, running over little kids on bicycles, unwanted pregnancies and gun violence. An independent, federally funded report entitled "Evaluation of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign, 2003 Report of Findings" -- released in January of this year -- declared that there was "little evidence of direct favorable Campaign effects on youth, either for the Marijuana Initiative period or for the Campaign as a whole. The trend data in marijuana use is not favorable, and for the primary target audience, 14- to 16-year-olds, past year use increased from 2000 through 2003." In addition, the 2003 CDC Youth Risk Behavior Survey -- released in May of 2004 -- found more U.S. teens reported smoking marijuana in the past 30 days ("current use" in drug research terms) than smoked cigarettes. As a result of these failures, the Office of National Drug Control Policy's National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign has devised another strategy -- get teenagers themselves to spread the anti-drug message. Enlisting a number of prominent journalistic organizations as partners, the ONDCP has created the Straight Scoop News Bureau. According to its web site, the Straight Scoop News Bureau is "an important component" of the Office of National Drug Control Policy's National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign and is designed "to provide student journalists with information about the realities of drugs and drug abuse." The aim is to have teenage journalists equipped to "disseminate that information" to other teens through the mediums they're most familiar with -- school newspapers, webzines, radio stations or television programs. To some longtime observers of the drug wars, the Office of National Drug Control Policy's National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign has been a dismal failure. "In fact," says Bruce Mirken, the Director of Communications for the Washington, D.C.-based Marijuana Policy Project, who recently discovered the Straight Scoop web site, "the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign has brought America years of misleading, inaccurate and costly ads." Over the years, the government has spent more than $1 billion on its anti-drug media campaigns; the budget for the current year is $145 million, a slight decline from previous years. With such prestigious partners like the Chicago Tribune Syndicate, the New York Times Newspaper in Education Program, the Newspaper Association of America, Pacific News Service, the Associated Student Press and several college journalism departments, one would expect that whatever specific goals Straight Scoop has, it would also encourage student journalists to be fair, accurate and balanced in their reporting. (Pacific News Service didn't respond to my phone inquiry about their involvement in this project.) That's not what Mirken, a former freelance journalist, has found. He was surprised to see that despite the participation of so many reputable news organizations the facts Straight Scoop are providing about marijuana is far from the "straight scoop." When Mirken clicked on "Feature Story Ideas" and then "Marijuana," he found that Straight Scoop encourages aspiring journalists to write about marijuana because it gives them an "opportunity to inform" their "fellow students not only of the physical, psychological and social consequences of using marijuana, but the benefits of living a marijuana-free life." Another web site resource, called "Fast Facts," offers "as documented facts, a variety of false or misleading statements," says Mirken. For example, Straight Scoop claims that "Studies show that someone who smokes five joints a week may be taking in as many cancer-causing chemicals as someone who smokes a pack a day of tobacco cigarettes." "Conveniently omitted," says Mirken, "is the fact that studies have never documented increased rates of lung or other smoking-associated cancers among marijuana users who don't smoke tobacco, or the extensive research showing that marijuana's active components can slow or stop tumor growth." Straight Scoop maintains that "Some marijuana users develop something called 'amotivation syndrome' in which they become extremely lazy, unmotivated, and they lose interest in things they used to enjoy." According to Mirken, "Left unmentioned is that this 'syndrome' has been thoroughly debunked. A 1999 White House-commissioned Institute of Medicine report on marijuana concluded, 'No convincing data demonstrate a causal relationship between marijuana smoking and these behavioral characteristics.'" Evidently, Mirken says, the source for Straight Scoop's so-called fact about "amotivational syndrome" is The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign Communication Strategy Statement, which can hardly be considered an impartial source. "Among the many sources of information listed as dealing with drugs and drug abuse, there is not one single mention of any organization or expert that questions drug prohibition or offers any perspective other than 'just say no,'" Mirken pointed out. Why doesn't Straight Scoop provide a full array of sources so that student journalists can evaluate both sides of this and other issues? While he recognizes that as Director of Communications for the Marijuana Policy Project he isn't a "disinterested observer," Mirken wonders why news organizations or groups that train and support student journalists would be partnering with a government public relations effort. "How on earth can journalistic organizations justify participating in an overt, unapologetic effort to turn student journalists into propagandists?"
__________________ "Truth is treason in an empire of lies." -Ron Paul |
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| | #2 |
| Seasoned Activist ![]() ![]() Join Date: Sep 2003
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| Basically -- "Oh ****, even our lies aren't working on kids to keep them from trying this stuff. What are we to do now if they're ignoring even our scare tactics?"
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| | #3 |
| New Member Join Date: Aug 2004
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| I honestly dont understand what they are thinking. There is nothing they can do to get people to stop using marijuana. I mean comon if they think they can get every person in america to actually stop smoking marijuana they are out of their mind. They is 1 thing they can do to kepp it out of the hands of kids...get ready for this........Tax and Regulate it like alcohol. If anybody has noticed alcohol is harder to obtain then marijuana(of course if you are under 21) where as marijuana you call up your dealer and pick up ur goods with no age check. |
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| Web Developer ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Feb 2003
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| Let's hear what "Straight Scoop" has to say about cannabis: 1. Although teenagers believe that over 70 percent of their peers use Marijuana at least occasionally, four out of five teenagers do not currently use Marijuana, (Marijuana: Facts for Teens) and half of teenagers (56 percent) report that they have never tried it. (Partnership Attitude Tracking Study - PATS). Wait a minute, I thought cannabis use was on the rise! First it's rising, then it magically is declining. Which one is it? 2. Today’s Marijuana is not only more potent than it was in the 1960’s but may even contain powerful drugs and hallucinogens that can cause coma or death. (Drug-Free Resource Net - Partnership for a Drug Free America). This myth is the result of bad data. The researchers who made the claim of increased potency used as their baseline the THC content of Marijuana seized by police in the early 1970s. Poor storage of this Marijuana in un-air conditioned evidence rooms caused it to deteriorate and decline in potency before any chemical assay was performed. Contemporaneous, independent assays of unseized "street" Marijuana from the early 1970s showed a potency equivalent to that of modern "street" Marijuana. Actually, the most potent form of this drug that was generally available was sold legally in the 1920s and 1930s by the pharmaceutical company Smith-Klein under the name, "American Cannabis". 3. Studies show that someone who smokes five joints a week may be taking in as many cancer-causing chemicals as someone who smokes a pack a day of tobacco cigarettes. ( Marijuana: Facts for Teens). Smoked Marijuana contains about the same amount of carcinogens as does an equivalent amount of tobacco. It should be remembered, however, that a heavy tobacco smoker consumes much more tobacco than a heavy Marijuana smoker consumes Marijuana. This is because smoked tobacco, with a 90% addiction rate, is the most addictive of all drugs while Marijuana is less addictive than caffeine. Two other factors are important. The first is that paraphernalia laws directed against Marijuana users make it difficult to smoke safely. These laws make water pipes and bongs, which filter some of the carcinogens out of the smoke, illegal and, hence, unavailable. The second is that, if Marijuana were legal, it would be more economical to have cannabis drinks like bhang (a traditional drink in the Middle East) or tea which are totally non-carcinogenic. This is in stark contrast with "smokeless" tobacco products like snuff which can cause cancer of the mouth and throat. When all of these facts are taken together, it can be clearly seen that the reverse is true: Marijuana is much SAFER than tobacco. Studies are also showing that cannabis has anti-tumor effects. Here are 22 more studies on the anti-cancer and anti-tumor effects of cannabis. 4. Some Marijuana users develop something called "amotivation syndrome" in which they become extremely lazy, unmotivated, and they lose interest in things they used to enjoy. ( The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign Communication Strategy Statement). See, Myth #11. 5. Some people find that Marijuana can increase their appetites an effect known as "the munchies" -- which may lead to gorging and weight gain. (The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign Communication Strategy Statement). Better ban McDonald's and all other fast food places as well. Increased appetite is also a good thing for some. Their strawmen arguments are laughable, but we've all heard them; just posted them for anyone that hasn't seen the counters to these yet.
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