 |

Tucker
Carlson, CNN’s Crossfire: “I have to say I think these spots
are a waste of $3.5 million. So you know, you’re the average 11th
grade dope smoker. And you see this on television. And you think,
they’ve told me that drugs fry my brain. They told me that, you know,
drugs are bad for my health, that drugs are bad for America. Now they’re
saying that drugs help terrorism. It’s going to be laughed right off
the set. They’re not going take this seriously, your target audience…Terrorists
are responsible for terrorism. Dope smokers are responsible for smoking
dope.”
Christopher
Caldwell, a Senior Editor at The Weekly Standard: "We can
leave aside the general question of whether government agencies
ought to be spending the public's money to --in effect-- lobby that
very same public to keep shelling out money for them...Let's leave
that aside and focus on the content of the ads...it ends with two
slogans across a silent screen: Drug money supports terror. Then,
if you buy drugs, you might too. What crap. Teenagers who are buying
drugs are not killing families in Colombia. They're not even 'helping'
to kill families in Colombia. They are just buying drugs…The drug
bureaucracy appears to believe that no one will take its drug war
seriously unless the federal government resorts to propaganda worthy
of the Zhdanov-era Soviet Union.”
Chris
Canter, director of the Walden House Foundation: "My initial
reaction is that I thought it was kind of compelling. But when you
think about it, probably your most problematic addicts aren't watching
the game anyway. It seems like everybody is trying to link everything
to terrorism. This ad, I felt, missed its mark."
Bill
Maher, Politically Incorrect: “So we were talking about
the way the administration now - which I think is awfully cynical
- they are piggy-backing the war on drugs on this war on terror…it
is outrageous…I don’t remember Colombians flying planes into the
buildings. The people who fly the planes into the buildings get
their money from oil. That’s the addiction, not drugs.”
D.L.
Hughley, actor, “The Hughley’s” (on Politically Incorrect):
Treatment doesn’t make the news. What does make the news is
rhetoric - ill-defined rhetoric like that…This administration, like
many other previous Republican administrations, are always trying
to scare people with this type of stuff...Clearly the issue is that
they’re trying to use the fear of 9/11 to promote a political agenda
that they wouldn’t have had.”
Ellis
Henican, Newsday columnist: “Since being confirmed by the
Senate in December, Walters has been an eager captive of the old-school
lock-‘em-up approach, emphasizing pointless police busts and endless
prison terms instead of proven drug treatment. And now he’s at it
again, with a preposterous new message and plenty of money to burn.
Our money, of course…You want to blame someone for the drug-terror
ties? Blame the politicians who refuse to change America’s expensive
and counter-productive drug laws.”
William Spain,
reporter for CBS.MarketWatch.com: “The unit of London-based
WPP Group - canned by Uncle Sam last year for padding timesheets
- just can’t resist lending its considerable talents to furthering
the latest Big Lie of a campaign that has been marked by deception
from its very beginning…Neglected in the campaign is that the same
killers also garner their share of loot from the sale of other commodities
- food, fuel, luxury goods and weapons…Are Americans subsidizing
terror when they fill their gas tanks?”
Arianna
Huffington, syndicated columnist: “In the single largest
ad buy the federal government has ever made, the White House spent
nearly $3.5 million to get these commercials on the Super Bowl --
$3.5 million spent not on treatment but on demonizing America’s
young people…It’s one thing to drop an egg into a frying pan to
demonstrate that drugs are bad for you, and quite another to link
drug users to bloodthirsty murderers….We know, for instance, that
bin Laden and al Qaida used tens of millions of dollars in profits
from the diamond industry to fund their operations. So how come
we didn’t see a commercial with a woman, say, a senator’s wife,
fingering the diamonds on her sparkling tennis bracelet and admitting:
‘I helped kids learn how to kill’?”
Brad
Jansen, Free Congress Foundation: “Wasting millions of taxpayer
dollars is something the Republicans claimed they were trying to
stop. They got elected on that promise. At a time when we are returning
to deficit spending and still trying to reduce the tax burden and
protect the Social Security so-called surplus and other sacred budgetary
cows, this TV expenditure is outrageous…The simplistic view that
we can prevent future terrorist events if everyone stopped abusing
drugs because of a 30-second sound-bite belies a more complicated
reality. Not only does it take a very limited budget to carry out
many terrorist attacks, but other parts of the federal budget routinely
subsidize the drug trade and its links to terrorism.”
Ethan Nadelmann,
executive director of the Drug Policy Alliance, on The O’Reilly
Factor: “One of the problems is they're based on the assumption
that American kids are stupid. American kids aren't that stupid.
You put out those fried-egg commercials and kids start spoofing
it. This one's going to get spoofed the same way those fried-egg
commercials are…In the 1920s, you're going to blame, you know, 50,
60 million Americans from the schoolyards to the White House would
drink a little beer. Does that mean that every victim of Al Capone
could be laid at their hands?”
Darrell Rogers,
Students for Sensible Drug Policy: “If we are going to blame
the illicit drug consumer for problems associated with prohibition,
then the government should talk about the many legal products that
have ties to terrorism or repressive regimes worldwide. Diamonds
are responsible for funding death squads, civil war and genocide
in the Congo, Sierra Leon and Liberia. Should we demonize engaged
couples? Oil supplies governments with horrific human rights records.
Should we blame the auto industry or soccer moms for human rights
abuses?”
Back
to overview
|
 |