Pubdate: Thu, 18 Nov 2010 Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON) Copyright: 2010 Russell Barth Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326 Author: Russell Barth KIDS WILL SEE LAUGHABLE DRUG VIDEO AS 'NOT4ME' People should take a look at the most recent TV spot that Health Canada is running to try and prevent kids from using drugs. The "drugsnot4me" campaign video is a total embarrassment due to the over-the-top rhetoric which generates fear rather than educates youth. Readers can see the video on the Health Canada website: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hc-ps/drugs-drogues/youth-jeunes/tv-not4me-odrogue-eng.php A girl hangs out in her room while a creepy voiceover sings an old children's ditty with the words changed; "One two, kicked out of school" and "three, four, snort some more." The voiceover follows with "five, six, need my fix" and then "seven, eight, it feels too late." The girl is trashing her room and finally, appears in a jail cell. The way it is photographed even looks creepy and dreamlike. It is an eye-rollingly laughable and embarrassingly lame attempt to both appeal to and frighten kids. "Just say no" was a joke in the 1980s when I was a teen, as was the "This is your brain on drugs" commercial where the girl trashes the house with a frying pan. Now this same, worn-out, proven-failure method of fear-mongering and lying is being rehashed and spewed at your kids. These ads will run on TV alongside commercials for booze, erection pills, junk food, violent movies, video games, and fast cars. If history is any indication, these new ads -- which you all paid for, by the way -- will likely have no effect on most smart kids who will try drugs, and cause the ones who don't to laugh even more heartily at adults' silly attempts to prevent teen drug use. Does anyone still believe that kids actually buy these ridiculous ruses? Our government does. For those keen on teaching kids about drugs without the hyperbole of the standard "education" programs, I recommend the Canadian Students For Sensible Drug Policy website at www.cssdp.org , the Educators For Sensible Drug Policy website at www.efsdp.org or the Law Enforcement Against Prohibition website at www.leap.cc . Russell Barth, Ottawa Educators for Sensible Drug Policy - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake