This is the first of a three-part series examining the
history of public opinion on illegal drug use. This segment focuses
on the 1960s and 1970s.
The war on drugs has been raging for decades. There is no sign
of victory, or even detente. Although they're swamped with
anti-drug messages, kids keep taking illegal drugs, and the drugs
are getting more dangerous. The Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention's 1999 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System found
that almost half (47%) of all high school students had used
marijuana at least once. Ten percent had tried a form of
cocaine.
Since 1969, the first year Gallup asked about illegal drug use,
Americans have grown increasingly more concerned about the effects
of drugs on young people. For instance, in 1969, 48% of Americans
told Gallup that drug use was a serious problem in their community.
In 1986, a majority of Americans, 56%, said that the government
spent "too little" money fighting drugs. By 1995, 31% said drug use
was a "crisis" and an additional 63% said it was "a serious
problem" for the nation as a whole.
Why haven't the decades of anti-drug messages solved this
problem? The blame tends to be spread across a variety of factors
-- unsuccessful government programs, underfunded law enforcement,
irresponsible media content -- but part of the problem has
certainly been the inefficacy of drug prevention programs.
Examining how Americans' attitudes have shifted during the 30+-year
history of the drug prevention movement can help us see what the
nation has done wrong, and what the nation is starting to do
right.
The 1960s
The 1960s brought us tie-dye, sit-ins and fears of large-scale
drug use. Hippies smoked marijuana, kids in ghettos pushed heroin,
and Timothy Leary, a Harvard professor, urged the world to try LSD.
In popular imagination, the 1960s were the heyday of illegal drug
use -- but historical data indicate they probably weren't. In fact,
surveys show that drug abuse was comparably rare, as was accurate
information about the effects of illegal drugs. In a 1969 Gallup
poll, only 4% of American adults said they had tried marijuana.
Thirty-four percent said they didn't know the effects of marijuana,
but 43% thought it was used by many or some high school kids. In
1972, 60% of Americans thought that marijuana was physically
addictive (research shows that it is generally not physically
addictive because regular users rarely show physical withdrawal
symptoms, but marijuana can be psychologically addictive).
Alana Anderson, a child custody officer, graduated from college
in 1969. "My generation was told that marijuana caused acne,
blindness, and sterility," she said. "It was a scare tactic rather
than an education tactic."
Teens of Anderson's generation were as observant as they are
now. They noticed the difference between parental warnings and
actual fact. So, many of them stopped believing anti-drug messages
in general. "Scare tactics are a big disaster," said Gary De
Blasio, executive director of Corner House Counseling Center for
Adolescents and Young Adults in Princeton, N.J., "They don't work,
especially if you use them on kids who have used drugs."
The 1970s
The scare tactics of the 1960s gave way to the contradictory
messages of the late '70s and early '80s. Drugs became glamorous,
without becoming better understood. In fact, the 1981 book The
Truth About Drugs -- The Body, Mind and You by Gene Chill and
John Duff asserted that cocaine wasn't addictive. The ranks of
those who had tried illegal drugs grew -- in 1973, 12% of
respondents to a Gallup poll said they had tried marijuana. That
number had doubled by 1977.
As drug use increased, many Americans began to see it as a
problem. In 1978, 66% of Americans said marijuana was a serious
problem in the high schools or middle school in their area, and 35%
said the same of hard drugs.
While more Americans were willing to admit they tried marijuana,
acceptance of it was still slow in coming. In 1978, 21% said they
would welcome increased acceptance of marijuana, while 72% said
they would not. That percentage who would welcome an increased
acceptance decreased to 13% three years later, and was just 11%
when last asked in 1991. In 1978, 83% of Americans said it was very
important that high school graduates with no plans for college
"know the health hazards of smoking, use of alcohol, marijuana and
other drugs."
Part two of this series will examine the 1980s and 1990s, and
the anti-drug message that works.