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The alcohol industry is bankrolling ads to scare you about legal pot

R

Robrites

Opponents of a ballot initiative in Massachusetts that would legalize recreational marijuana are up with a ridiculous new campaign ad that touches on every anti-legalization talking point in 30 seconds.
Titled “Neighborhoods,” the ad focuses on a mother and daughter driving past a comical number of marijuana dispensaries en route to their local toy store (which is obviously located next door to yet another marijuana shop).
An ominous voiceover warns of thousands of similar dispensaries that sell such nefarious items as edibles that look like candy, which catches the eye of the young daughter from the ad.
The voiceover continues, this time warning that instances of fatal car crashes are up in “pro-pot states,” and that in Colorado, there are more dispensaries than Starbucks and McDonalds combined. The ad closes with our distraught mother discovering her son Kevin emerging from the pot dispensary. Fade to black.


There’s a lot to unpack here, so let’s go through it piece by piece.
Marijuana edibles made to look like candy does sound like a potential threat to Massachusetts’s youth, if they were being sold at your local Hannafords. But in fact, the sale of pot would be regulated more carefully than cigarettes, and sold only in licensed dispensaries to those 21 years and over. Sorry, kids.
As for car crashes, there’s a lot of data floating out there, none of it conclusive. What we know for sure: there is zero evidence that recreational marijuana has had any effect on the rate of fatal car crashes. The blood tests that medical examiners’ offices use aren’t able to accurately determine whether or not traces of THC were enough to impair a driver’s ability to drive.
The ad points to a widely cited NBC News story from 2014 that loudly proclaims “Pot Fuels Surge in Drugged Driving Deaths.” The article is based on a study that found the number of car crash victims who had marijuana in their system increased threefold between 1999 and 2010, a period during which a dozen states legalized medical marijuana.
Did you catch the logical fallacy there? What the article did not mention was that during that same 11 year period, the number of fatal accidents actually fell by more than 30 percent. The “surge” wasn’t in the number of marijuana-induced accidents, it was in the number of victims who had traces of marijuana in their system — a number that obviously increased as more and more states legalized medical marijuana. It would be like mapping the number of fatal car crashes between 1999 and 2010 in which the victim had a cup of Starbucks coffee in the car.
In Colorado, fatal accidents in the state actually fell during the first year that recreational marijuana was publicly and legally available.
While the group behind the ad— the Campaign for a Safe and Healthy Massachusetts—appears especially concerned with the state’s motorists, their “safety first” message is undermined somewhat by the fact that several of the group’s biggest donors come from the state’s largest distributors of alcohol, a drug that is very much responsible for fatal car accidents.
The alcohol industry has been bankrolling campaigns against marijuana legalization, fearing that recreational weed may pose unwanted competition for their products. Wine & Spirit Wholesalers of Massachusetts, Inc. and Beer Distributors of Massachusetts, Inc. gave a combined $75,000 to the group, and several local bars donated thousands more to oppose Question 4, according to the Massachusetts Office of Campaign & Political Finance.
And while the ad portrays the rise in marijuana dispensaries as a bad thing—ironic, given the collection of free-market-loving Republicans like Sheldon Adelson and David Frum who have a hand in Massachusetts’s anti-pot campaign—in states that have legalized recreational pot, governments have also seen huge financial windfalls from this trend.


https://thinkprogress.org/a-deeply-...tion-in-massachusetts-b0e1b0189d7a#.n9fhjloi3
 

sadpanda

Member
somebody needs to bankroll an ad that exposes what the alcohol, tobacco and big pharma companies are trying to do
 

aridbud

automeister
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Of course they are....and what a lobby behind alcohol.

I think perceptions are changing, albeit slowly. Know numerous folks that were dead set against cannabis until they or family member/friend found relief from cannabis.

Indeed, hypocrites...alcohol kills how many world wide each year costing billions for healthcare due to alcohol??

That shows there has been progress if they fear cannabis making waves and anti-marijuana commercials!! ;o)
 

therevverend

Well-known member
Veteran
Sheldon Aldeson is terrible. Bankrolling the fight against internet poker while owning huge casinos. Blaming cannabis for his spoiled idiot of a son's overdose.
He was a Democrat until his casino employees went on strike. Figured he could use his union connections in the Democratic party to get them back to work. When this didn't happen he had a tissy and changed parties. It will amuse me when cannabis and internet poker are legal after he's spent a vast sum of money battling against them.
 
H

Huckster79

Theynare scared of a much healtier, happier, less negative effects on individual and society recreational medium. I used to be a big party drinker, thought i didnt like weed from a couple bad experiences as a late teen ("friends" that let me try it first couple times drunk off my ass) rediscovered it a years later, and without doing it on purpose my binge drinkking fell by wayside.... i havent got drunk in a few years and even that was a one time in several years event and i just dont miss it.... sure nice glass of cab hits spot now n again, but i can happily live out my days hang over free...

Booze is a bad drug, im not calling for prohibition on it again im a civil liberatarian but damn rite they should be scared of our plant. Kinda cliche but true: never seen a stoners wife withna black eye cuz the hubby was one toke over the line...
 

therevverend

Well-known member
Veteran
Heard a radio commercial about the dangers of 'impaired driving' this morning. What caught my attention, they said 'driving drunk, on drugs, or high you will be busted'. Notice how 'high' is a separate category from 'drugs'? I know it's Washington state with the Rec stuff but still a big step in the right direction, I'll avoid the debate about how high is too high to drive, how they can test for it, etc. For another time...
 

Tudo

Troublemaker
Moderator
ICMag Donor
Veteran
FK the alcohol "industry" those cockroaches. NO OTHER industry has resulted in more deaths, more murders, more family breakups, more unhappy very fked up people walking around with empty lives than the alcohol "industry" which has zero fking morals and takes no responsibility for the mayhem it's created.


Should publish a list of the home address of every cksucker that has power in that industry. ( I can think of a few of them like this)


To you in the alcohol "industry" :moon:
 
no one forces you to drink remember that. just like no one forces you to smoke. no one forces you to take meds. ohh they do do that. oops.
 

Aether

Member
id say the alcohol company that will stand out from the legalization as a winner would be the one that would try to benefit from it...like making hemp beer...instead of fear mongering...
 
H

Huckster79

Arther, The craft beer world is an entirely different beast than "alcohol industry" they will embrace it as they would be the ones that would make weed brew. Hell most prob do just can't sell it. Kinda like the drug cartels from third world countries and Mexico is to us. Yes we both may have herb, but one does it out of greed and with violence the other seeks peace and grows out of love for the plant and good she brings. Craft brewers are artisans of fermentation like we try to be with growing, they I would consider our brothers... not truly part of the "alcohol industry"
 

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