MooShiE
Bluelighter
Duckboy said:I'm in!!
Although the concept of "drug-free" should really have a lot more to do with friends shouting you.......
ROFL
Dont take drugs everyone, your going to DIE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Duckboy said:I'm in!!
Although the concept of "drug-free" should really have a lot more to do with friends shouting you.......
sierra said:I always wondered why I sucked at sports. I used to think it was because I'm just unco-ordinated and in need of glasses. Obviously I was wrong! The reason why I can't catch and throw is because of Marijuana use. Holy Hell, who'd have thought!
Half of me questions whether the people who wrote these ads were taking drugs themselves, or whether they are naturally stupid.
I think these ads, for starters, shouldn't be aired before 8pm. Exposing children to car crashes and drug addicts on tv right before bedtime creates nightmares and fear. To relay this fear parents are then forced to tell their children what drugs are, how they affect people, and then why children shouldn't take them. While I think it's important for children to be aware that drugs are unhealthy, I think that some age groups are too young to deal with the intellectual side of "why". And these ads hardly help, all they do is give a "Because I said so" answer.
I guess the main problem I have with the campaign is its slogan. "You don't know what it'll do to you". Well, uh, I actually do know... and so do a whole lot of other people. People take drugs for this very reason. To get high without having to drink alcohol. The slogan makes the entire campaign into a total joke for people who participate in drug use. And to those who don't know much about drugs, they promote suspicion and fear.
The outcome for parents is even worse. Parents who know very little about drug use (and believe me, there are quite a few...) are now being told that the tell-tale signs of drug abuse are things like depression, and not being able to catch a ball. In a nation where 80% of the population will experience depression at some point, it makes me wonder how many poor depressed teenagers are now being accused of taking drugs. Furthermore, how many parents will now think that by simply stopping drug use that depression and uncoordination will ~go away~?
This anti-drug campaign is just another nail in the coffin for safe drug use. A campaign that focussed on HOW drugs affect people would have been far more effective. I bet if we all pool some ca$h together we could air our own radio ads; although it seems rather pathetic that the public should need to combat a such a stupid government campaign. I suppose this is what you get when you have a one party system.
anna! said:^ So you see, then, the influence that a post on bluelight can have on someone who doesn't know any better?
doofqueen said:
Shouldn't the government be focosing on harm minimisation (like bl here) rather than the whole 'just say no' approach? Most kids ARE going to try drugs wether they know the dangers or not. Wouldn't it be better to educated them on how to be safe while on the stuff rather than just say "you don't know what it will do to you"
smileyfish said:Excellent post Sierra.
Not owning a TV, I've only seen the sections of the ads they showed on Insight last night* I do understand why the govt. feels the need to run such ads - the general populace wants to see the govt. being "tough on drugs". An honest and informative campaign would trigger massive public outcry and the government would be accused of promoting drug use (just like all organisations involved in HM currently are). Thankfully, our govt. chooses to appear tough whilst still being relatively soft on drug offenders (compared to the US).
Showing these ads to young children is, i feel, extremely irresponsible and I agree they should not be screened before 8pm. I also think they should be providing more useful infomormation. Yes, the effects depicted canand do happen (though in a minority of cases). Great - how about some information on what to do if you find someone in these situations? If your friend is suffering anxiety from marijuana use, or has collapsed due to a bad reaction with a poll, should you just stand there and say "see, I told you drugs were dangerous"? Where is the information about where and how to get help? Generating more fear and uncertainty helps no-one. The govt knows these ads don't reduce use (we have the stats to prove it, after all) and are airing them purely to appease voters, but you'd think they could at least make them useful.
* NicktheCheese, Madmick19 and johnboy did us proud![]()
MazDan said:I think that doofqueen raises a very valid point about her son asking the question what is xtc.
And while i have no problems with some sort of campaign, I think that it can often have a negative effect and that is certainly the case here.
I know that doofqueen has a very open relationship with her son and hence he has no probs asking his Mum when he wants to know something.
But how many other kids were wondering the same thing and instead ask there mates at school or older brother.
With the result that enough is learnt that makes it an item of interest and they will in fact end up trying it cos they prefer to believe someone whom they know that they believe is taking it with no repurcussions...........It immediately tells them the adds are bullcrap.
Most people who use speed xtc etc are gunna be partying at various venues throughout the cities........why not go direct to the source with an informative educatuional package............such a package that should include references for this site and others.
i think that would be more benificial than sewing the seed of interest in a bloody ten year old.
CHiLD-0F-THE-BEAT said:Originally posted by samadhi
I also think that while sometimes "shock value" campaigns can help, they also tend to desensitise people.![]()
^It's such a catch 22 - - - hell, the images of the Vietnam war shocked and appauled us, yet there is still war.
It's expected now that we'll be shown the carnage and violence that is war.
Also, *starfalls69* - - - I don't think it's particularly useful to have them screened to children.
Like Samadhi mentioned, they're quite graphic and I wouldn't like my young kids being subjected to that.
Originally posted by KemicalBurn
I forgot to say that studies have to repeated a number of times before they are accepted as a scientific fact.
Now, i cant explain that any simpler without pictures. You really are gonna have to shut up sooner or later
endlesseulogy said:Thank you for clearing that up ozbreaker. I didnt pick up on that very valid point.![]()
War On Drugs A War on Freedom
Acclaimed US author Sam Smith branded the war on drugs 'a crucial precursor of the end of the First American Republic' this week, and suggested that the true motive behind the campaign is repression.
"The war on drugs was the first major test by the country's elite to see if
Americans would willingly surrender their constitutional rights," Mr Smith declared in Progressive Review.
"It turned out that they would and so for the past twenty years invasions of civil liberties increased, America threw more and more of its young people into prison, while exploding drug war budgets did nothing to stem the growth of the drug industry. Further, the drug war was a useful testing ground for repressive measures instituted following September 11," he suggested.
His analysis closely matched that of fellow author and British counter-culture icon Howard Marks, who served seven years in a maximum security US prison after building a 20 year career as one of the world's biggest cannabis smugglers.
"The War on Drugs protects no one outside a small elite group, endangers everyone else and is a sinister means of social control," said Mr Marks, in a speech he made at the Orange Index debate in Glasgow two years ago.
"One of the traditional and obvious ways of controlling people in society, whether it's a military dictatorship or a democracy, is to frighten them so that they'll accord authority to their superiors who claim they will protect them," he pointed out.
"The War on Drugs creates fear of people from whom we have to protect ourselves. It also takes care of superfluous people who don't contribute to profit making and wealth (in the US, this tends to mean the poor and black): they're put in prison," he added.
skrufff-e
I've had good times on drugs, that's a fact. I've had bad times on drugs, too, ok? But I've had good and bad relationships...and I'm not giving up pussy.
Bill Hicks