mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-12-25 15:29:25 -05:00
528 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
528 lines
29 KiB
Plaintext
Article 21146 of alt.drugs:
|
|
Path: news.claremont.edu!usc!wupost!sdd.hp.com!caen!garbo.ucc.umass.edu!hamp.hampshire.edu!dhirmes
|
|
From: dhirmes@hamp.hampshire.edu
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.drugs
|
|
Subject: "War on Drugs and Media" Paper (LONG)
|
|
Message-ID: <1991Dec10.205213.1@hamp.hampshire.edu>
|
|
Date: 11 Dec 91 00:52:13 GMT
|
|
Sender: usenet@nic.umass.edu (USENET News System)
|
|
Organization: Hampshire College
|
|
Lines: 521
|
|
|
|
Representation of the "War on Drugs" in "Time" and "Newsweek"
|
|
|
|
By David Hirmes (dhirmes@hamp.hampshire.edu)
|
|
|
|
December, 1991
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Big Picture?: A Case for Perplexity
|
|
|
|
My method of research was fairly simple. I searched for articles in
|
|
Time and Newsweek that in some way dealt with the "War on Drugs"
|
|
between 1986 and 1989. I came up with several cover stories, and many
|
|
smaller ones. As for my purpose: I was looking for how these news
|
|
magazines handled a problem that has been a part of society for thousands
|
|
of years, and yet just recently has been declared a "war". Even in terms of
|
|
hightened awareness about drugs, there were several times in history, not
|
|
just the 60's and 70's, in which drugs became of "national importance". So
|
|
why the hype? How had it changed and how does it change through the
|
|
years analysed? I decided that the best way to discover this would be to
|
|
search for the "frames" the media used to portray the "war on drugs".
|
|
The idea of frames was first introduced to me in Todd Gitlin's book "The
|
|
Whole World Is Watching". Gitlin's example was the turbulent times of
|
|
the 60's, and in particular, the New Left. He found that the media used
|
|
various ways of framing the New Left which gave a distorted view of
|
|
what the movement was all about. In this paper I hope to expose some
|
|
frames used in the "war on drugs".
|
|
|
|
The overall impression I got through reading a plethora of articles from
|
|
Time and Newsweek from August of 1986 to November of 1989 was that
|
|
the news media were just as perplexed as the government and the general
|
|
populous about drug abuse. The questions asked in '86 were still being
|
|
asked in '89, with perhaps a heightened sense of urgency. The question of
|
|
why people do drugs in the first place, why and how it leads to addiction,
|
|
how serious is the problem, is it getting worse, what can we do about it as
|
|
citizens, what can the government do about it, how has it gotten this far,
|
|
who is to blame... The questions remain in a steady stream, yet no one
|
|
seems to have realistic answers. Those who do make promises or
|
|
predictions usually end up looking foolish a month or a year later.
|
|
President Bush has learned his lessons, and has made little promises on
|
|
how successful the "war on drugs" will be in the near future. Recently,
|
|
"Drug Czar" William Bennett resigned from his post. One of the prices
|
|
payed for turning a problem into a "war" is that there is always the chance
|
|
one might lose.
|
|
|
|
Framing the Problem - 1986
|
|
|
|
Discovery
|
|
|
|
The government's "war on drugs", and therefore, coverage of the
|
|
nation-wide drug epidemic, began in full force when large scale drug abuse
|
|
expanded from the inner-city to middle-class Americans and the
|
|
workplace. Coverage also expanded with increased violence in urban,
|
|
and later rural areas. There is an interesting admission to this subtle (and
|
|
not so subtle) classism in both 1986 cover stories from Time and
|
|
Newsweek. In Newsweeks' "Saying No" article (8/11/86) it is stated that:
|
|
"In part, the change in the public mood has a racist tinge: drugs simply
|
|
moved from the black and Hispanic underclass to the middle-class
|
|
mainstream and are being felt as a problem there."1 While the admission
|
|
of racism within mainstream America was surprising, it was equally as
|
|
interesting that Newsweek blamed Americans for their lack of caring
|
|
about the plight of the inner-city, and not the lack of news coverage itself. I
|
|
have found, although I did very little research before 1986, that the
|
|
problems of drug abuse in the inner-city were covered only when the
|
|
problem had reached many more levels of American society. This is
|
|
exemplified by what seemed to be an extremely offensive comment in the
|
|
Time article "The Enemy Within":
|
|
As drugs have moved out of the ghetto and into the workplace, as bus
|
|
drivers and lawyers and assembly-line workers get hooked, innocent
|
|
consumers are put as risk. The cost of employers from drug abuse-- from
|
|
lost productivity, absenteeism and higher accident rates-- is estimated at
|
|
about $33 billion by the government.2
|
|
|
|
Are they assuming that there are no bus drivers, lawyers, and
|
|
assembly-line workers in the ghetto? Is the loss of work- place
|
|
productivity more of a concern than the decay of the inner- city?
|
|
Obviously, Time knows its audience.
|
|
|
|
A History Lesson
|
|
|
|
After realizing that there is indeed a drug problem in America, the two
|
|
news magazines diverged on two different paths. While Newsweek
|
|
chose to deal with the current administrations changing policy, Time
|
|
decided to give some historical context to the drug problem. Since the
|
|
article had already framed itself as as dealing with the "war on drugs", the
|
|
history that was presented held all drugs at an equally evil level. Pot,
|
|
heroin, cocaine, and PCP were all equally responsible for the current drug
|
|
crisis. Of course, no mention of legalization efforts, were mentioned, two
|
|
notable deletions seemed to be the World War II program of "Hemp for
|
|
Victory" as well as the complete failure of prohibition. While pot is
|
|
regularly lumped with much more dangerous drugs such as cocaine,
|
|
heroin, and PCP, or in the context of a "gateway" drug, cigarettes and
|
|
alcohol are rarely mentioned. By leaving out cigarettes and alcohol, which
|
|
account for over 100 times more deaths a year than all illegal drugs
|
|
combined, an important facet of this issue is missing.3 The violent aspects
|
|
of drugs like crack and PCP are hyped in many articles, but rarely are the
|
|
moods of those on alcohol.
|
|
There were some positive aspects of "The Enemy Within" article. For
|
|
one, a framing in which the "enemy" is ourselves, rather than some evil
|
|
Latin American drug empire is a positive shift the idea that DEA officials
|
|
can cure the drug problem by cutting off the Southern supply. And the
|
|
article did spend almost half of a small paragraph explaining the
|
|
disproportionate cases of death and health care costs from tobacco and
|
|
alcohol opposed to other illegal drugs. But it must be stressed that
|
|
devoting even a half a paragraph on this subject was the exception to the
|
|
rule.
|
|
Reagan's Analysis
|
|
Probably due to my reading Mark Hertsgaard's "On Bended Knee", a
|
|
book about the relationship between the Reagan administration and the
|
|
press, the coverage of Reagan seemed especially dubious. In the
|
|
Newsweek cover story "Saying No", it is stated point blank that Reagan
|
|
began taking the drug crisis seriously only when public opinion polls
|
|
deemed it necessary. While Nancy's Just Say No campaign had been in
|
|
full swing for a few years, the President had not considered it a top priority
|
|
until '86. The article states that Reagan's philosophy had always been one
|
|
of education and treatment, where volunteers and corporate America
|
|
should take the responsibility to deal with the problem. Yet at the same
|
|
time, a full $1.8 billion of the $2 billion given for "war on drugs" in 1985 was
|
|
for enforcement, leaving the remaining $200 million to be divided between
|
|
education and treatment programs.4 In fact, from 1982 to 1986, the
|
|
allotment for treatment and education actually decreased over $80
|
|
million.5
|
|
The Newsweek article also featured a short interview with the
|
|
President. When asked "You've described America as 'upbeat, optimistic'
|
|
--why are drugs such a problem now?" Reagan replied: .ls1
|
|
For one thing... the music world.. has... made it sound as if it's right there and
|
|
the thing to do, and rock-and-roll concerts and so forth. Musicians that
|
|
young people like... make no secret of the fact that they are users, [And] I
|
|
must say this, that the theatre--well, motion-picture industry--has started
|
|
down a road they'd been on before once, with alcohol abuse...6
|
|
(note: ... and [] are Newsweeks, not mine.)
|
|
|
|
When asked directly why drugs were a problem in America, our
|
|
Presidents answer was rock and roll and the movies. This is the president
|
|
who had been cutting social programs for the last five years, who had been
|
|
virtually ignoring the problems of the inner-city, and this was his thoughtful
|
|
analysis. But this had been part of Reagan's fairy-tale version of America
|
|
from the start. By framing the issue in this way, Reagan disqualified his
|
|
domestic policy from any part in the drug crisis, and at the same time
|
|
trivialized the issue as non-political.
|
|
As a side note, just as Hertsgaard points out over and over in "On
|
|
Bended Knee", the press let the President frame the issues. Following his
|
|
short interview, Newsweek dedicated a full article entitled "Going After
|
|
Hollywood" which spent a good amount of time nit-picking at recent
|
|
movies in which drug use was glorified.7 While the initial Newsweek
|
|
cover story was entitled "Saying No!", no one from the inner-city was
|
|
asked about the effectiveness of this campaign, nor were they asked about
|
|
any of the new policy changes. In the place where the drug crisis
|
|
supposedly originated, no voice was given at all.
|
|
|
|
Framing the Solution - 1986
|
|
The Big Three
|
|
|
|
Options to combat drug abuse are limited to the Big Three:
|
|
enforcement, treatment, and education. Throughout the four years
|
|
analyzed, the "debate" always dealt with which of the three is more
|
|
important to focus on financially. Legalization is barely mentioned at any
|
|
level, except to completely lambaste the idea. On the other end,
|
|
enforcement debates range from cracking down on casual users, to full
|
|
military intervention at home and abroad.8
|
|
|
|
"Battle Strategies"/Reagans on TV
|
|
Even as early as September of 1986, the news magazines had a cynical
|
|
view of the "war on
|
|
drugs". The First Couple went on national television urging Americans to
|
|
stop the using drugs at the same time when law enforcement officials
|
|
were telling the press there was no way to stop the supply of drugs from
|
|
entering the U.S.9 A Time article entitled "Battle Strategies" explained
|
|
the various methods of "combat" (remember, this is a "war"): The border
|
|
patrols, heightened arrests, drug testing (which would soon become a
|
|
major issue), treatment, and education.10 Another article in Newsweek
|
|
(9/22/86) explained how the Reagans were getting involved through
|
|
Nancy's Just Say No campaign and Ronald's new interest in the issue
|
|
(now that he realized voters felt it an important issue).11 The tone of both
|
|
articles seemed to take the issue as more of a political one that a social or
|
|
economic problem, a trend that would continue through my research. In a
|
|
September, 1986 article, Time extolled: "The abuse of illegal drugs has
|
|
certainly become the Issue of the Year, except that the main issue
|
|
involved seems to be how far politicians scramble to outdo one another in
|
|
leading the crusade."12 One must ask: Whose fault is that-- the politicians,
|
|
the news media, or both?
|
|
In framing the solution, the news magazines seem to forget that the
|
|
problem itself has not truly been identified. The so- called solutions are
|
|
attacking the symptoms, not the disease. This simple fact is not recognized
|
|
by the news magazines. By telling kindergardeners in the inner-city not to
|
|
do drugs is one thing, but when these same children grow old enough to
|
|
see the best opportunity for wealth and power is that of the drug dealer,
|
|
ideals could change quite easily.13
|
|
|
|
Re-Framing the Problem - 1988
|
|
Night of the Living Crack Heads
|
|
|
|
The National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA) conducts a survey every
|
|
two to three years called the National Household Survey on Drug Use,
|
|
which questions about 8,000 people.14 Much of the government's policy
|
|
relies on this document for data. In 1988, after decades of almost steady
|
|
increase, the survey showed a decline in most drug use in the United
|
|
States. The marked exception was cocaine (and its smokable derivative
|
|
crack) which went down for casual use, but rose steadily for those who
|
|
used the drug more than once a week.15 By this time, the "war on drugs"
|
|
had been in full swing for several years, and while the NIDA statistics
|
|
showed one side of the story, the "rising tide of violence" (a favorite media
|
|
catch phrase), "crack babies", rise of crack use by upper and middle-class
|
|
whites, and what appeared to be the growth of gangs, gang violence, and
|
|
drugs in small towns across America, showed quite another. A common
|
|
frame to begin articles in which policy changes or announcements were
|
|
being made by Bush or William Bennett, were specific incidents of
|
|
violence or irony resulting from the drug crisis.16 Interestingly enough,
|
|
while this gave a cynical and somewhat confrontational frame for the
|
|
article, it also seemed to lead into something of an aggressive opinion
|
|
regarding the implementation of enforcement policy: In response to more
|
|
violence, reporters' first reactions seemed to be "Where are our guns?"
|
|
The vast majority of articles found from 1988 on that did not report
|
|
specifically on an event or government announcement, dealt with various
|
|
aspects of crack. Two out of the three cover stories dealing with drugs
|
|
from 1988 to 1990 had to do with crack: Time had "Kids Who Sell Crack"
|
|
(5/9/88) and Newsweek simply had "Crack" (11/28/88). The third was
|
|
entitled "Addictive Personalities" and featured Kittie Dukakus on the
|
|
cover (Newsweek, 2/20/89). Both "crack" cover stories had various
|
|
problems and inaccuracies, although in general Time seemed to have a
|
|
slightly better grasp on the "big picture" (i.e. some semblance of analysis)
|
|
than Newsweek, in which sensationalism seemed a much higher priority.
|
|
I'd like to give a somewhat detailed account of these articles because to a
|
|
large degree, they focus on most of the (domestic) frames used in media to
|
|
represent the "war on drugs".
|
|
The Time story begins with the tale of a 13 year old dealer named Frog.
|
|
In describing why young blacks from the ghetto might begin to deal drugs,
|
|
Time explains: "Like most young American people, they are material girls
|
|
and boys. They crave the glamorous clothes, cars, and jewelry they see
|
|
advertised on TV." I suppose because most young Americans do not read
|
|
their magazines, this allows Time to print ads of a similar type (not to
|
|
mention another highly addictive drug, nicotine, which kids can't see on
|
|
TV). Showing that not only kids from the ghetto can get hooked, Time
|
|
next focuses on Eric, an upper-middle class white honor student who
|
|
became addicted to crack. The next section of the article discusses the
|
|
"live for today" attitude of many teenagers involved in drug dealing, as well
|
|
as prison over- crowding. When a huge raid in L.A. is conducted and "Half
|
|
(of those arrested) had to be released for lack of evidence" A mere
|
|
sentence is dedicated to this frightening trend of mass arrest, with only the
|
|
"civil libertarians" upset over the seeming loss of civil rights.17 The article
|
|
redeems itself to some degree, towards the end, when it goes into a
|
|
somewhat detailed account of the current job and educational situation for
|
|
lower-class people in America. This is the only article I found where more
|
|
than half a sentence is used to blame cuts in job training and education
|
|
programs by the Federal government as a possible problem somehow
|
|
related to drugs.18 It is also worthwhile mentioning that this article was
|
|
written on Reagan's way out, over seven years since Reaganomics began.
|
|
Newsweek, which tried to give a nation-wide view of the drug war by
|
|
going to a crack house, a prison, a rehab center, and a court, failed to find
|
|
any connections or insights into the drug problem except to equate all drug
|
|
addicts as on the same low-life level. It's hard to expect much from an
|
|
article that in the third paragraph states: .ls1
|
|
|
|
These are the two Americas. No other line you can draw is as trenchant
|
|
as this. On one side, people of normal human appetites, for food and sex
|
|
and creature comforts; on the other, those who crave only the roar and
|
|
crackle of their own neurons, whipped into a frenzy of synthetic euphoria.
|
|
The Crack Nation. It is in our midst, but not a part of us; our laws barely
|
|
touch it on its progress through our jails and hospitals, on its way to our
|
|
morgues.19
|
|
If images virtually out of "Night of the Living Dead" are used as the
|
|
initial frame towards the drug addict, why would anyone not feel that these
|
|
"Others" should be dealt with by any means necessary. Since this article
|
|
was purported to be a "day in the life piece", practically no historical
|
|
background on the crisis, and no analysis of a larger picture were given,
|
|
leaving a very narrow view of the true problem.
|
|
In Herbert Gans' book "Deciding What's News", he describes what he
|
|
calls "enduring values", values that the press consider an intragle, positive,
|
|
and necessary part of American society. It is when these values are
|
|
threatened, that the news responds. Some of Gans' "enduring values"
|
|
include: "ethnocentrism, altruistic democracy, responsible capitalism,
|
|
moderatism, [and] social order"(p.42) All of these values are threatened
|
|
by drugs. Newsweek's portrayal of this bipolar society, the "Crack
|
|
Nation", is proof of how the threatening of these values can turn to
|
|
dangerous assumptions, exaggerations, and misrepresentations within the
|
|
"objective" news media.
|
|
|
|
Re-Framing the Solution - 1988
|
|
Big Guns
|
|
The journalists seemed as war-weary as the DEA agents they were
|
|
reporting about. So when Time purports in March of 1988 that
|
|
"Americans lose patience with Panama", they are possibly referring more
|
|
to the administration and news journalists, than the American people.20
|
|
With hind-sight, we can see that Noreiga was actually a minor player in
|
|
Latin American drug smuggling operations. Soon after the U.S. invation,
|
|
the New York Times reported that the flow of drugs in and out of Panama
|
|
actually had increased.
|
|
Later in 1989, when Newsweek reports on William Bennett's progress
|
|
as Drug Czar (one of the oddest terms associated with the "war on
|
|
drugs"), the reporter intones: "...he is likewise correct that tougher law
|
|
enforcement is the necessary first response."21
|
|
To a large degree, it seems that reporting on the drug war by 1988-9
|
|
turned from cynical, somewhat hopeless, and aloof, to cynical, angry, and
|
|
battle-worn. Reporters began to tire of the governments rhetoric, and as
|
|
drugs began to draw closer to their own homes, they became more
|
|
anxious for a solution. So perhaps because of the fact that law-makers are
|
|
giving no other solutions, when Bennett and Bush explain the solution
|
|
begins with more cops, more guns, more prisons, and harsher treatment of
|
|
casual users (as well as treatment and education, of course), the press are
|
|
not so alarmed. When the Presidential appointee Bennett explains that
|
|
legalization would be a "national disaster" as would attacking the "social
|
|
front", one find the options even more limiting.22 .pa
|
|
|
|
Breaking the Frames: Distortions and Omissions
|
|
In beginning to understand the framing of the "war on drugs" within the
|
|
news media, one must first look at the statistics (the NIDA survays) and
|
|
how they are used to shape governmental policy and public opinion. First,
|
|
it must be noted that these are household surveys, which would exclude
|
|
the homeless and those with no permanent homes. Second, the rising
|
|
trend to punish the casual user would automatically create an atmosphere
|
|
of distrust and suspicion. Third, the surveys do not consider legal drugs
|
|
such as alcohol and cigarettes, which account for many more deaths a
|
|
year than all other illegal drugs combined. I am unaware if the police
|
|
reports, which have been used to show that large amounts of people
|
|
arrested test positive for drugs, include alcohol. While these reasons do
|
|
not completely disqualify the results of the surveys, they do question their
|
|
accuracy.23
|
|
The next problem found through the articles analyzed were the
|
|
selection of sources for information and anaylsis, in a word: who was given
|
|
a voice in the news. By this I mean who was interviewed, quoted, and
|
|
used as the source of information for the articles. For the most part,
|
|
ordinary citizens were interviewed only to determine the level of the
|
|
crisis-- how bad a neighborhood had gotten, how many people they knew
|
|
were involved with illegal drugs, etc. Never was a man or woman from
|
|
the inner-city, or even one from a suburban area for that matter, asked
|
|
what they thought the causes of the drug crisis were, or why it was so bad
|
|
in certain areas. For the most part, the Big Picture was left to the
|
|
government and to a lesser extent, the news media itself.
|
|
Where were the voices of teachers, medical professionals, social
|
|
workers, minority group leaders, civil rights activists, and the most taboo of
|
|
all, legalization activists? The medical professionals and social workers
|
|
were asked how their various programs were coping, and sometimes the
|
|
successful ones were examined in detail, but that was the extent of their
|
|
voice. Minority leaders, even media favorites like Jesse Jackson, were
|
|
ignored, and their cries for reinstating social programs lost in the Reagan
|
|
years were never heard. Civil rights activists were only refereed to in the
|
|
third person as in "civil libertarians were worried of this law" or "those
|
|
concerned with civil rights had reservations about the legality". The one
|
|
notably exception to this was the continuing controversy over drug testing.
|
|
But it is important to realize that this controversy deals with almost all
|
|
Americas. Anyone with a job (no longer simply air-traffic controllers and
|
|
government employees with "security" positions) could be effected by
|
|
these measures. And yet the truly dangerous actions, ones that most
|
|
Americans take for granted, are all but ignored. From mass arrests of
|
|
suspected drug dealers and not using warrants to search homes and cars,
|
|
to suggestions of using the military to destroy coca fields in other countries-
|
|
- these issues were barely discussed.
|
|
The entertainment element within the news media played an important
|
|
role in the "war on drugs" as well. Just as with Magic Johnson now, were
|
|
it not for the death of Len Bias and the scandal of Daryll Strawberry, who
|
|
knows how long it would have taken the media to catch on that there was
|
|
a drug problem in America. When looking up source articles for this
|
|
paper, the list of "Drugs and Sports" was longer than that of "Drug Abuse"
|
|
or "Crack" for several of the years between 1986 and 1990. Possibly the
|
|
media found in sports-drug related scandal,an entertainment side of the
|
|
drug war that had more mass appeal than an inner-city murder or siezure
|
|
of some odd tonnage of cocaine from Latin America.
|
|
Finally, while it is not a panacea, nor a complete answer to the reasons
|
|
behind America's drug crisis, I had thought that questioning the social and
|
|
economic policies of Reaganomics would have brought to light some of the
|
|
reasons why drug dealing, let alone drug abuse would become more
|
|
appealing to those who suffered from the cuts in Federally funded social
|
|
programs in housing, medical care, and education. But those comparisons
|
|
were never made. Except for a small section in the Time cover story of
|
|
1988 mentioned earlier in the paper, simply the idea that economic factors
|
|
were somehow involved in drug abuse were completely ignored. A
|
|
portion of the reason for this might have to do with Reagan's insistence
|
|
that it is the drug user and potential drug user that must be focused on. It is
|
|
"Just Say No" and law enforcement-- these are our options. Not much
|
|
has changed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10"Battle Strategies" Time (Sep 15 86)
|
|
|
|
11"Rolling Out the Big Guns" Time (Sep 22 86)
|
|
|
|
12"The Enemy Within" Time [cover story] (Sep 15 86)
|
|
|
|
13see "Addictive Personalities" Newsweek [cover story] (Feb 20 89) for
|
|
the sillyness of trying to find a definition.
|
|
|
|
14see "Drug Abuse and Drug Abuse Research", U.S. Dept. of Health and
|
|
Human Services, Rockville, Maryland, 1991, also see the first chapter of
|
|
"Communications Campaigns About Drugs", Pamela J. Shoemaker, ed.,
|
|
Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc., Hillsdale, NJ, 1989.
|
|
|
|
15 see "Drug Abuse and Drug Abuse Research", U.S. Dept. of Health and
|
|
Human Services, Rockville, Maryland, 1991, and "National Drug Control
|
|
Strategy", U.S. Government document, 1990.
|
|
|
|
16"Tears of Rage" Time (Mar 14 88) and "Bennett's Drug War"
|
|
Newsweek (Aug 21 89)
|
|
|
|
17"Crack" Newsweek [cover story] (Nov 28 88)
|
|
|
|
18"Kids Who Sell Crack" Time [cover story] (May 9 88)
|
|
|
|
19"Crack" Newsweek [cover story] (Nov 28 88)
|
|
|
|
20"Tears of Rage" Time (Mar 14 88)
|
|
|
|
|
|
21"Bennett's Drug War" Newsweek (Aug 21 89)
|
|
|
|
22Ibid.
|
|
|
|
23see the chapter "Cocaine-Related Deaths: Who are the Victims? What
|
|
is the cause?" Linda S. Wong, M.A., and Bruce K. Alexander, Ph.D., in the
|
|
book "Drug Policy 1989-1990: A Reformer's Catalogue" Arnold Tresbach,
|
|
ed., The Drug Policy Foundation, Washington, D.C., 1989.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Article Bibliography
|
|
(in chronological order)
|
|
|
|
"Saying No!" Newsweek [cover story] (Aug 11 86)
|
|
|
|
"Going After Hollywood" Newsweek (Aug 11 86)
|
|
|
|
"The Enemy Within" Time [cover story] (Sep 15 86)
|
|
|
|
"Battle Strategies" Time (Sep 15 86)
|
|
|
|
"Rolling Out the Big Guns" Time (Sep 22 86)
|
|
|
|
"Urban Murders: On the Rise" Newsweek (Feb 9 87)
|
|
|
|
"L.A. Law: Gangs and Crack" Newsweek (Apr 27 87)
|
|
|
|
"The Southwest Drug Connection" Newsweek (Nov 23 87)
|
|
|
|
"Drug Use: Down, But Not in the Ghetto" Newsweek (Nov 23 87)
|
|
|
|
"Tears of Rage" Time (Mar 14 88)
|
|
|
|
"Where the War Is Being Lost" Time (Mar 14 88)
|
|
|
|
"Kids Who Sell Crack" Time [cover story] (May 9 88)
|
|
|
|
"Crack" Newsweek [cover story] (Nov 28 88)
|
|
|
|
"Addictive Personalties" Newsweek [cover story] (Feb 20 89)
|
|
|
|
"Fighting on Two Fronts" Time (Aug 14 89)
|
|
|
|
"Bennett's Drug War" Newsweek (Aug 21 89)
|
|
|
|
"A Plague Without Boundries" Time (Nov 6 89)
|
|
|
|
|
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
|
|
|
|
"Drug Abuse and Drug Abuse Research", U.S. Dept. of Health and
|
|
Human Services (NIDA is under this orginization), Rockville, Maryland,
|
|
1991.
|
|
|
|
Gans, Herbert J., "Deciding What's News", Vintage Books, New York,
|
|
1979.
|
|
|
|
Gitlin, Todd, "The Whole World Is Watching", Univ. of CA Press,
|
|
Berkeley, 1980.
|
|
|
|
Hertsgaard, Mark, "On Bended Knee", Schocken Books, 1988.
|
|
|
|
Hiebert, Ray E., ed., "What Every Journalist Should Know About the
|
|
Drug Abuse Crisis", Voice of America, Wash. DC., 1987?
|
|
(this book has articles from Nancy Reagan and Ed Meese
|
|
amoung others.)
|
|
|
|
Hoffman, Abbie, "Reefer Madness", The Nation, Nov. 21, 1987.
|
|
|
|
Levine, Michael, "Going Bad", Spin, June 1991.
|
|
(this article is the story of a DEA agent disallusioned
|
|
by the governments handling of the drug war)
|
|
|
|
"National Drug Control Strategy", U.S. Government document, 1990.
|
|
|
|
Shoemaker, Pamela J., ed., "Communication Campaigns About Drugs",
|
|
Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc., Hillsdale, NJ, 1989.
|
|
(a suprisingly uninformative book.)
|
|
|
|
Trebach, Arhold S., ed., "Drug Policy 1989-1990: A Reformer's
|
|
Catalogue", The Drug Policy Foundation, Wash. DC, 1989.
|
|
(an excellent resource for those interested in
|
|
drug legalization.)
|
|
|
|
Some sources suggested to me that I didn't get a chance to read:
|
|
|
|
"The Great Drug War" by Arnold Treback. Macmillan, 1987.
|
|
"Storming Heaven: LSD and the American Dream" by Jay Stevens,
|
|
Atlantic Monthly Press, 1987.
|
|
"Acid Dreams: The CIA, LSD, and the Sixties Revolution" by Martin
|
|
Lee (one of the founders of F.A.I.R.) and Bruce Shlain, Grove
|
|
Press, 1985.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[END OF PAPER]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|
|
Another file downloaded from: The NIRVANAnet(tm) Seven
|
|
|
|
& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Taipan Enigma 510/935-5845
|
|
Burn This Flag Zardoz 408/363-9766
|
|
realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510/527-1662
|
|
Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 801/278-2699
|
|
The New Dork Sublime Biffnix 415/864-DORK
|
|
The Shrine Rif Raf 206/794-6674
|
|
Planet Mirth Simon Jester 510/786-6560
|
|
|
|
"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
|
|
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|