Nine-point plan to create a major social problem
Nine-point plan to create a major social problem
12 November 2010 Media Speech
What would a nine-point plan on how the
Government could create a major social problem in NZ look
like?
Well, first you would take a drug which is known to be of high risk to public health (e.g. the equivalent of a Class B drug) and legalise it. Better still, you choose a drug that is known to directly cause aggression, but which also causes depression, is neurotoxic and carcinogenic so that the full range of health and social damage is likely to occur.
2nd Deny that the drug is actually a drug, by never mentioning the word and talk about it like it is a normal grocery item that you'd naturally expect to find in a supermarket.
3rd Make it really accessible, so that it can bought just about anywhere, at any time, on virtually any day of the year, especially in supermarkets.
4th Allow full and free commercialisation of it so that the price is really low in order for everyone to easily afford lots of it.
5th Make sure young people of 18 years of age can legally drink on licensed premises but confuse the issue by requiring them to be 20 years old in order to buy alcohol to drink elsewhere.
6th Elevate drug pushing (of this drug) to be one of the most highly respected careers in the land. The bestowing of NZ Honours, even Knighthoods, to industry leaders might be an effective way to do this.
7th Make sure you protect the drug pushers' right to promote the drug, especially to the nation's families, through the most powerful means possible such as TV and billboards. Turn a blind eye to any deception in the advertising such as links between using the drug and being cool, sexy, successful and part of the in-crowd.
8th Make sure that the drug is
linked with everything that New Zealanders feel most proud
about, especially sport. If there was going to be a major
international event in NZ for instance, do everything you
can to help the drug pushers promote their drug at the
event. The ultimate would be if the drug could become the
centrepiece of the event. "Party Central" would be an
excellent concept to work on. Getting the PM behind this,
would be a great idea.
9th Knowing that New Zealanders
more than just about any other country in the world enjoy
getting around in private motor vehicles, make sure that
intoxication won't prevent them from driving their cars, and
get your mates in the Automobile Association to back this
position.
The first page of the Law Commission’s report
states:
“Alcohol is a legalized drug with the
potential to cause serious harm. We propose a new policy
framework that amounts to a paradigm shift in the regulation
of alcohol compared with the current system. We anticipate
there will be considerable resistance to some of the
proposed measures.”
I must admit I didn’t
anticipate that the resistance would come from the
Government of NZ!
The Government’s Alcohol Reform Bill
to reduce excessive drinking is a recipe for the status quo
– which means continuing disaster.
The last weekend’s appalling behavior at Eden Park, where a liquor ban wasn’t enforced, is proof the Government hasn’t gone far enough. It served to highlight the inadequacies of our current laws and shamed our nation abroad.
Why does this Government have difficulty accepting that alcohol is a drug?
This Government is not in step with the majority of New Zealanders. The mood of the country towards alcohol abuse is changing but it is being led by the public and the media, not the government.
In the same week as the Eden Park shambles, organisers of Christchurch’s NZ Trotting Cup day got it right by implementing a simple wrist band system that was removed from patrons thought to be intoxicated. This would have been unheard of five years ago and shows that the public is willing to change entrenched drinking habits.
Who would have thought that the Maori
Affairs Select Committee’s proposal for a Smoke Free New
Zealand in 2025 would cause hardly a ripple of protest?
It’s because the time is right. Let’s aim for a Drunk
Free New Zealand too, it is in step with public
opinion.
There is 70% support to lower the drink driving
blood/alcohol limit yet the Government needs ‘more
research’. Really?
What is this Government scared of
in the face of all the facts?
Alcohol abuse is costing
this country billions every year – not to mention the
human misery it causes.
This Government is normally a
slave to the polls yet it is ignoring the polls on liquor
reform.
Cheap alcohol is one of the main problems but
this isn’t being addressed despite advice and research
from NZ and international experts.
Our statistics on road deaths are horrific yet reducing the blood alcohol limit from 0.8 to 0.5 of alcohol per 100ml of blood ‘needs more research’. How many more deaths from drink driving must this nation endure?
One in every five New Zealanders is a
heavy drinker - this is equal to the combined population of
Wellington and Christchurch!
60% of criminal offending is
associated with alcohol abuse.
Getting wasted shouldn’t
be an ambition to which our people aspire.
This Government
is showing abject political weakness over the alcohol debate
which begs the question….
What is the National Party
getting from the Liquor Industry for its unwillingness to
act decisively?
How much money is being put into the “Victory Fund” account of the National Party by the liquor industry – could we have an answer from National Party members today and/or from the liquor industry itself?
I’m not holding my
breath.