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View Full Version : drug users help terrorists (maybe you saw the commercial)



mojo
02-05-2002, 07:20 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2002/US/02/04/ret.terrorism.drugs/index.html

New U.S. ads tie drug use to terrorism funding
February 4, 2002 Posted: 2:23 PM EST (1923 GMT)

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The U.S. government spent nearly $3.5 million on two television commercials warning Americans who buy illegal drugs -- especially young people -- that they may be helping to fund terrorism.

The ads debuted during Sunday's Super Bowl.

About half of the international terrorist organizations identified by the United States have been linked to drug trafficking, said John Walters, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy.

"Our goal is to ... create awareness about the very link between drug use in this country and the funding of terror around the world," Walters said Monday. "We'll measure some of that awareness in subsequent surveys. But the ultimate goal here is to reduce drug use."

The first 30-second ad asks, "Where do terrorists get their money? If you buy drugs, some of it might come from you."

A series of images flashes on the screen indicating the costs of terror-related items. Among them are fake ID, $3,000; safe house, $7,200; computer, $1,200; explosives, $1,200; AK-47, $250; bribes, $4,000; and wire transfer, $200.

In the second ad, young people posing as drug users describe their "contributions" to terrorism.

"I helped murder families in Colombia," one says.

"It was just innocent fun," adds another.

Other messages include "I helped kill policemen"; "I helped a bomber get a fake passport"; "I helped blow up buildings"; "My life, my body"; and "It's not like I was hurting anybody else."

Each ad refers viewers to the Web site theantidrug.com, which is supporting the anti-drug campaign. The site has translations in Spanish, Cambodian, Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese.

"The bottom line is simple: Terror and drug groups are linked in a mutually beneficial relationship by money, tactics, geography and politics," the Web site says. "Americans must understand that our individual choices about illicit drug use have the power to support or undermine our nation's war on terrorism."

Walters adds, "This is basically an education effort. The ads at the Super Bowl begin that process by talking about the very real link."

'This message is extremely powerful'
He said print ads also are being developed and lesson plans provided to teachers to carry the anti-drug message to more than 8 million children.

"Our goal is to give people the information to make informed choices," Walters said. "We think they will change their behavior when they get that information."

The ads were tested in five cities on more than 200 people in various age groups.

"We know this message is extremely powerful. And it's information people want," Walters said. "It's something they can do to combat terrorism in talking to young people and in their own behavior."

He said that nearly every major U.S. government agency was involved in preparing information for the ads and other groups also were consulted "to make sure we had a message that was honest, fair and powerful."

Among the Web site partners are the National Fatherhood Initiative, 100 Black Men, the Ad Council, the National Institute on Drug Abuse and the Partnership for a Drug-Free America.

Six out of 10 American teens say that knowing there is a link between illegal drugs and terrorism would make them less likely to use drugs, according to a series of surveys the Partnership for a Drug-Free America conducted last year.

A series of telephone surveys in October and November, each polling 800 parents who have children ages 12 to 17 living at home, found most of them believe international terrorism is financed, at least in part, by the illegal drug trade. The surveys had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percent.

Similar Partnership surveys conducted during the same months -- each polling 500 youngsters ages 12 to 17 -- found that nearly half of them agreed on the drug-terrorism link.

The polls of young people had a margin or error of plus or minus 5 percent.

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sounds almost like another reason to make pot legal

topane
02-05-2002, 07:21 AM
I thought terrorists got their money from oil. Silly me.

Ladogaboy
02-05-2002, 09:28 AM
Yeah, but if we crack down on illegal drugs in the U.S., where would the CIA get their funding?

sho.gun
02-05-2002, 09:47 AM
Originally posted by Ladogaboy
Yeah, but if we crack down on illegal drugs in the U.S., where with the CIA get their funding?


LOL! :heh:

molecularfire
02-05-2002, 11:31 AM
:stupid:

Blu
02-05-2002, 01:17 PM
I thought this stuff came from Colorado or something? :rolleyes: Swindled again...

turndon
02-05-2002, 08:16 PM
I think that if such a connection does exist, it makes an incredible case for legalization (or decriminalization) of drugs. If drugs are legalized, they can be taxed, creating revenue. They can also be grown or manufactured domestically (perhaps under supervision of the FDA or other governing body to insure quality;)), effectively eliminating demand for drugs produced by terrorists. Apparently, this alone would terribly cripple terrorists' abilities to fund themselves, if the government's propaganda is to be believed.... Hmmmmm...

ArkiStan
02-05-2002, 08:57 PM
If we legalized pot, then we can fight terrorism and the tobacco companies as well!! :cool:

whitak24
02-06-2002, 07:32 AM
Originally posted by ArkiStan
If we legalized pot, then we can fight terrorism and the tobacco companies as well!! :cool:
well, we could, but everyone would be so stoned that they probably wouldn't :heh:
just kidding - i'm not trying to start a debate on what the results of the legalization of marijuana would be.

Ladogaboy
02-06-2002, 10:13 AM
Well, why can't we just use their weapons against them? Do just like the CIA and DEA did when they started introducing drugs into innercity America, but instead, start shipping drugs into countries that support terrorism. That way, they can be high and stupid, and we can take them over more easily. :hmm:

:shrug: It could work. :rolleyes:

Grimm
02-06-2002, 10:32 AM
Yeah! More propaganda to brainwash the American public. Who made the drugs worth something? The American Government. If it hadn't been criminalized they wouldn't have been able to sell it here in the first place. They drugs would have been grown and manufactured here, much cheaper than anywhere else. We have very efficient farmers here in the US.

The single best way to reduce drug use is education. But our government settles for propaganda, becaues it knows what it does best.
In fact if we were growing hemp, we could be making methanol fuel for our cars and not giving the terrorists money by buying foreign oil.

So our drug policy allowed this to happen, not our drug use.