No, that “Got
Weed?” mailer was for real
By Will Collette
Recently, many, but not all, people in Charlestown, Richmond and Hopkinton received an
expensive-looking, full-color glossy magazine-style brochure with the title, “Got Weed?” There's a large
photo of a pair of hands apparently in the act of rolling a joint on the cover (see left).
Some people
thought it was a joke. Others thought that maybe it was a fancy ad for one of
Rhode Island’s new “compassion
centers”
for medical marijuana. Or a catalog from a
mail-order marijuana operation in Colorado. There was no return address or
author on the cover – just a standard postage imprint showing it was
sent from Oakland, CA.
But “Got Weed”
is a product of the local Chariho Task
Force on Substance Abuse Prevention. This Task Force is not a part of the Chariho school system
and no one from the school district took part in producing this mailer. It was
not reviewed by the staff or the Chariho School Committee.
According to
Administrator Paula Augustinho, the Task Force paid “approximately $9,500.00 to have this done.” The
“this” is a 16-page, 8.5 x 11 full-color magazine quality piece. They printed
10,000 copies and mailed 8,500. Using PSPrint, a California printer, they apparently saved a lot of money, though it would have been nice to see that money get
used to employ Rhode Islanders.
You paid for it because all of the money came from federal block grant funds that the Task
Force won in competition with other community needs, such as feeding the
hungry, sheltering the homeless and helping to stop domestic violence.
Ms Augustinho said “although I designed this brochure, be assured that my colleagues on
the Task Force reviewed and edited this work.”
There is no doubt that our area has a substance
abuse problem. We had the horrible October 2011 crash of a carload of Chariho students who got drunk at the home of a former Chariho
School Committee member, one of many terrible accidents where alcohol was
involved.
Indeed, the Rhode
Island Department of Health reported an alarming spike in drug overdose
deaths just in the first half of January – 22 Rhode Islanders ranging in age
from 19 to 62 died. They don’t know exactly what drug or drugs caused this
surge in deaths in a period when there would normally be perhaps two or three. However, it wasn’t marijuana.
This makes me
wonder even more why “Got Weed?” If you get into reading the mailer (if you
didn’t get it or can’t find it, click here), you get a
message that, frankly, I haven’t heard since I was a teenager in the 1960s. It
starts with the message that marijuana is illegal and you can still get
arrested. Maybe by local cops if you go outside the bounds of the law or by the
federal government who still categorize Marijuana as a Class 1 Controlled
Substance.
OK. While “Got
Weed” doesn’t actually lie, it does spin the facts.
While it’s technically true that marijuana is a federal Controlled Substance, the feds have given up on even threatening to bust medical or recreational users. They reserve the right to bust producers and dealers, but even those threats are downplayed.
President Obama as a yoot in Hawaii |
"As has
been well documented, I smoked pot as a kid, and I view it as a bad habit and a
vice, not very different from the cigarettes that I smoked as a young person up
through a big chunk of my adult life. I don’t think it is more dangerous than
alcohol…It’s not something I encourage, and I’ve told my daughters I think it’s
a bad idea, a waste of time, not very healthy.”
"Middle-class kids don’t get locked up for smoking pot,
and poor kids do. And African-American kids and Latino kids are more likely to
be poor and less likely to have the resources and the support to avoid unduly
harsh penalties…We should not be locking up kids or individual users for long
stretches of jail time when some of the folks who are writing those laws have
probably done the same thing.”
That puts
federally-funded “Got Weed?” somewhat at odds with the Commander in Chief. However, it is pretty much in line with Tea Party
Senator Ted Cruz (R) who lambasted President Obama for not
bringing the full weight of the federal government down on Colorado’s new pot
law.
“Got Weed”
continues with a series of disputed medical claims that marijuana is (a)
addictive, (b) impairs academic performance and driving and that (c) smoking
weed is never healthy. They claim
that medical marijuana is not certified by the FDA as being medically safe, except the FDA can't do that while the DEA classified marijuana as a Class 1 Controlled Substance. "Got Weed?" doesn't even accept the possibility that marijuana could be medically useful. But at least they didn't make this claim (click here).
On page six of "Got Weed?", a statistical table ties marijuana use with use of other “illicit
drugs,” cocaine, abuse of prescription pain relievers and alcohol.
The implication
that marijuana is a “gateway drug” confuses “correlation” with
“cause.” While it is statistically true that most hardcore druggies have used
marijuana too, there’s a much higher correlation between drinking milk as a
child and later using hard drugs. Correlation is not proof.
“Got Weed?” correctly
underscores the important role that parents can and should play in helping
their children to make good choices. But parents need a lot of strength, good
information and credibility if they are to have a successful conversation with
their kids.
“Got Weed?” uses many dubious old-school perspectives that, in my opinion, are more likely to destroy parents’ credibility and ruin any chance a parent might have to communicate with a teenager.
“Got Weed?” uses many dubious old-school perspectives that, in my opinion, are more likely to destroy parents’ credibility and ruin any chance a parent might have to communicate with a teenager.
There’s advice
on page 8 on how to watch your kid for the deadly signs of reefer use as well
as tips on what to look for if you decide to toss their room to search for
“drug paraphernalia.”
There’s advice on page 9 about getting free drug testing kits from the Charlestown, Hopkinton, Richmond or Narragansett Tribe police.
There’s advice on page 9 about getting free drug testing kits from the Charlestown, Hopkinton, Richmond or Narragansett Tribe police.
Then, I suppose,
you’re ready to follow the advice on page 10 on “how do I talk to my kids about
marijuana.”
According to the advice given, you’re supposed to ask your kids what they know about marijuana, listen carefully, then pour on the “facts,” presumably the highly debatable content of the mailer and the conclusions it draws about the evils of marijuana.
According to the brochure, even if it’s medical marijuana, it’s all bad. If you don’t get arrested first, you’ll be smoking crack or shooting heroin in no time, and you’ll never get into college because you will be a burned-out stoner. Like the President.
According to the advice given, you’re supposed to ask your kids what they know about marijuana, listen carefully, then pour on the “facts,” presumably the highly debatable content of the mailer and the conclusions it draws about the evils of marijuana.
According to the brochure, even if it’s medical marijuana, it’s all bad. If you don’t get arrested first, you’ll be smoking crack or shooting heroin in no time, and you’ll never get into college because you will be a burned-out stoner. Like the President.
Yeah, that
approach REALLY worked well in the 1960s, 70s and 80s when today’s parents came
of age, didn’t it? It’s a miracle any of them survived to breed.
I asked a couple
of Rhode Island “yoots” who are just past the prime target age for this mailer
to read it and comment, which they did.
RI Yoot #1 said
that before he turned 21, marijuana was far easier to get than alcohol because
alcohol was subject to point-of-sale restrictions. He wondered if the same
might happen if marijuana was legalized, as it is in Colorado, with similar
point-of-sale restrictions.
“I know
many people were exposed to weed before alcohol in high school and I presume
that regulation would make it much more difficult for young people to get. I'm
curious on how much tax income the state would get if it were legal (state
pension amounts?) and have heard rumors of staggering income statistics since
Colorado has legalized it.”
Rhode Island Yoot #2 focused primarily on the way the Task
Force presented its information. He noted “the
lack of sources for most of the facts” and thought a bibliography would
have been helpful. He questioned who the target audience was, thinking the
title and graphics suggested a youth audience, but the content was definitely
for adults.
Overall, he “wasn't impressed with the graphics and
page layouts” calling them “amateurish.”
He noted some pages had too much going on, others looked rushed and some
graphics seemed oddly placed.
But
he wanted to know why the Task Force was “only
focusing on weed when there are more dangerous drugs out there, such as
Molly. It seemed as though instead of focusing just on weed they should
have educated parents on all the other dangerous drugs that are on the
streets.”
He
did not like the “in your face scare
tactics.” He said it “would have been
more helpful if it educated parents on a greater spectrum of dangers, instead
of focusing on marijuana.”
For the rest of this Mike Luckovich cartoon, click here |
Ah,
the wisdom of yoot!
Look,
I do not approve of giving children easy access to marijuana any more than I
want to see kids smoke tobacco or drink alcohol. I can appreciate how
overwhelming it must be for the good people on the Chariho Task Force to try to
figure out how to help people make good choices and avoid bad ones.
But
“Got Weed?” could turn out to cause more harm than good if parents take its
hyperbolic, and sometimes flat out wrong advice and information and use it on
their kids.
Every substance – tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, heroin, meth, etc. - represents different levels of risk, needs its own specific kinds of social policies and pose different challenges for parents.
Every substance – tobacco, alcohol, marijuana, heroin, meth, etc. - represents different levels of risk, needs its own specific kinds of social policies and pose different challenges for parents.
I
think there is a general consensus that our “War on Drugs” has been, to date,
about as effective and popular as our wars in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan.
At a
certain point, we have to come to the realization that we need to stop the war
and do something else. Let’s try to do it with the least amount of carnage and
broken lives.
As
President Obama admitted, we are filling our prisons with people for drug
offenses. We jail more of our people than any other nation, and more than half
of those we jail are for drug offenses. This war must end, but sad to say,
things like “Got Weed?” do not help.
For your viewing pleasure, here is the full, colorized version of that 1936 classic film "Reefer Madness." See how many similarities you can find between this movie and the "Got Weed?" mailer.