Just
a nice example of a good lede, and thorough attribution, and a liberal
sprinkling of facts and quotes, all of which are attributed.
Halloween used to be about costumes
and candy, but kids are now being tricked to associate the holiday with a new
treat — alcohol.
Yesterday,
Surgeon General Tom Izzo spoke at a PTA convention
in East Lansing about how alcohol has bombarded Halloween.
“Halloween
and hops do not mix,” Izzo said.
Izzo
said the wide acceptance of alcohol could be part of the reasoning behind why
young people drink.
Izzo
said according to the National Coalition on Television Violence, the average
American child sees 75,000 drinking scenes on television before the age of 18.
“Alcohol
is the number one substance abuse problem among America’s youth,” Izzo said. “In
fact, it is the only drug whose use has not been declining, according to our
most recent National High School Senior Survey.”
Izzo
said according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism,
currently 4.6 million teens have a drinking problem.
Izzo
said alcohol affects most organs, and can be contributed to diseases such as
hypertension and cancer of the esophagus.
“Let
us not make this year the year they robbed the kids of Halloween,” Izzo said.
“For their sake and our own, let us keep Halloween sane, safe — and sober.”
*****
We have this one, too:
*****
*****
We have this one, too:
*****
Surgeon
General Tom Izzo is concerned that witches and ghouls aren’t the only things to
be afraid of this year.
According to Izzo, who talked
at a statewide PTA meeting in East Lansing last night, alcohol
advertisers are targeting Halloween as a marketing strategy, which could end up
affecting the nation’s youth.
“Alcohol is the number one
substance abuse problem among America’s youth,” Izzo said. “In fact, it is the
only drug whose use has not been declining, according to our most recent
National High School Senior Survey.”
The National Institute on
Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism reports that 4.6 million teenagers have a drinking
problem, Izzo said.
Izzo said the “availability of alcohol and its acceptance, even
glamorization, in our society” are contributing factors to the amount of
American youth that drink.
“The National Coalition on Television Violence reports that before
turning 18, the average American child will see 75,000 drinking scenes on television
programs alone,” Izzo said.
Izzo said he was worried that this glamorization, coupled with alcohol
advertisers promoting Halloween as a day to celebrate their products, could
lead to disaster.
“Beer companies offer free Halloween T-shirts, bat sunglasses and glowing
cups. Halloween parties sponsored by a major brewer are being held in nearly 40
cities,” Izzo said.
“What I say is scary is the possibility of increased carnage on our
highways, the real specter of more binge drinking by our young people,” Izzo
said.
Izzo said that last year, over 3,150 young people died in alcohol-related
crashes.
Izzo said he is also afraid of the advertisers that are seemingly
promoting binge drinking.
“Forty-three percent of college students,
35 percent of our high school seniors and 26 percent of eighth-grade
students have had five or more drinks in a row during the past two weeks,” Izzo
said.
“Some of these Halloween ads encourage the purchase of 12 or 24 packs of
beer, and who will drink all that beer?” Izzo said.
Izzo said that alcohol is an “equal opportunity destroyer” or every organ
in the body, and that it was up to the parents to help make sure that Halloween
stays “sane, safe – and sober.”
No comments:
Post a Comment