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News :: Miscellaneous
U.S. Drug Czar Admits to Failed Ad Campaign, After Wasting Nearly $1 Billion Current rating: 0
15 May 2002
There seems to be plenty of money for dumb, wasteful uses of tax-payer dollars.

U.S. Drug Czar Admits to Failed Ad Campaign, After Wasting Nearly $1 Billion in Taxpayer Money
Drug Policy Alliance Calls for Immediate Halt to Controversial, Untested $10 Million Ad Campaign Linking Americans Who Use Drugs to Terrorism
NEW YORK - May 14 - According to today's Wall Street Journal, Drug Czar John Walters plans to ask Congress for continued support of his office's National Youth Anti-Drug Media campaign, despite definitive evidence of its failure to reduce drug use among American youth. A new report evaluating the five- year old campaign, which has spent $929 million in taxpayer money so far, found that it "isn't reducing drug use," as Mr. Walters told the Journal.

Remarkably, however, Mr. Walters, head the Office of National Drug Control Policy, is pushing for continued support of the failed program as it comes up for Congressional reauthorization for another five years.

"Admit five years of failure, and ask for $900 million more?" asked Drug Policy Alliance Executive Director Ethan Nadelmann. "What about supporting after-school programs that really get to the root of the problem?"

Mr. Walters also continues to lead a $10 million broadcast and print advertising campaign linking young people who use drugs to terrorism, despite lack of evidence that this message is helping reduce drug use. These controversial ads have been criticized for being politically motivated, using support for the war on terrorism to mask the growing public skepticism about the expensive, failed war on drugs.

The Drug Policy Alliance, the nation's leading drug policy reform organization, is calling for an immediate halt to the taxpayer-funded drug and terrorism ad campaign.

Marsha Rosenbaum, head of the Safety First project at the Drug Policy Alliance, which promotes honest drug education for teens and parents, emphasized that when it comes to young people and drugs, their safety should be the top priority.

"These scare tactic ads, just like the egg in the frying pan, do nothing to help teens make safer decisions for themselves, or to encourage dialogue with their parents," said Rosenbaum.

The new website - www.safety1st.org -- stresses the value of abstinence, but also the need for fallback strategies when teenagers begin to experiment.

"Congress has a real opportunity right now to demand that money for drug education be invested in keeping our kids safe," said Rosenbaum. "These failed, expensive television ads must stop."


ATTENTION JOURNALISTS: Experts on honest drug education for teens and parents are available for interviews. Please call Shayna Samuels at 212-547-6916 for more information.

Drug Policy Alliance is the nation's leading organization working to end the war on drugs and promote new drug policies based on common sense, science, public health and human rights. The Alliance, headquartered in New York City, has offices in California, Washington, DC and New Mexico. Ethan Nadelmann is the executive director.
See also:
http://www.drugpolicy.org
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