"There's talk a lot of bad things"; Your Drug Fear Mongering of the Day From a South Carolina TV Station
Worry!


A guidance counselor at a high school in North Augusta, Georgia South Carolina reportedly set up robo calls to parents about the danger of prescription drugs, because she's heard a lot of talking and seen teens behaving differently (because adolescents in the absence of some kind of drug are totally mood stable).
Here's how the CBS affiliate sets up its fear mongering gem:
Down the halls and around every classroom corner .
There's talk a lot of bad things.
"You do hear a lot of things," says one teacher at North Augusta High.
And that talk has prompted administration to spread the word.
"A lot of parents, most parents, aren't going to believe their child, is one that would take a prescription drug," said Jane Kaplenski, the guidance director at North Augusta High.
But it's happening at there school. And maybe even at your child's school.
"It's something that we're concerned about and we want parents to know what to look for," said Kaplenski.
Kaplenski and a teacher at the high school that was also interviewed mention prescription drugs as the "big talker," but don't get any more specific than "like the drugs for ADHD."
Jacob Sullum noted earlier this year in explaining the fuzzy language and thought process behind the campaign against "abuse" of ADHD drugs like Adderall that the condition "is a malleable concept based on subjective impressions," one that about 20 percent of high school boys are labeled with.
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The grammer in article is badly poor.
It's rampant here. I noticed during Nicks last article at Time, that it's apparent that they have editors, and we definitely do not have any here at Reason. I don't even think we have spell checkers.
... at there school.
*rufus and darryl pointing, bloodhound in tow* ... "That there school!"
Fuck journalists and fuck journalism. It's dead. (An award-winning, 20-year-career journalist speaks.)
The bird is the word.
Wow. If anyone's on drugs, I'm pretty sure it's the editor of that article.
They're not on drugs, they're trying to fearmonger without having the slightest evidence or facts to do so. And this word salad is the result.
This is an every day thing here, I just don't like pointing it out because I don't want to be the type-o or grammar police or anything. But sometimes it is embarrassing. How hard is it to have someone spellcheck an article before posting it?
Is it the article source, or just here? Assuming that is cut and paste, I might be wrong, but there are so many type-os on articles here that it's totally believable it's just here.
No, it's the original article. Go read it. Two of the quotes I posted aren't even from the copy and paste that appears in this article. They're from the CBS affiliate.
Ok, my bad. But there are lots of grammar errors and misspellings in articles here. There were a few in one of Nicks articles a few days ago, from Time, and while they showed up here, they were not in the Time article. Apparently someone there fixed them.
I'm assuming Patrick Price was typing out that article one handed on an iPhone, while weaving in and out of 90 mph traffic... to beat the deadline..
What's embarrassing about this is that it's a CBS affiliate. When Amanda Marcotte posts some crazy, poorly written bit of bullshit, it makes sense since Slate and Rawstory probably don't employ editors given the number of articles that those sweatshops churn out.
With a website that carries the CBS name, you'd expect some level of quality control.
You mean the CBS of 'fake but true' fame?
The high school is in north augusta,sc. Common to confuse it with augusta, ga.
Er no such thing as Augusta sc. North Augusta sc exists.
Cosmos don't care about the sticks.
Local News are some of the biggest fear mongers, ever. This has been true for as long as I can remember.
Between CNN and local news, it's a wonder that any parents of teenagers are able to sleep at night.
OT:
Breaking news: Exclusive photos from inside the nerve center of the ACA exchange data center!
Jesus Reason, this is some really irresponsible journalism. Don't you realize there are THINGS out there? THINGS that are BAD?!
So - they saw the latest South Park and decided it must be teh drugz, as opposed to alien plants. Or a reality TV show.
Either of which would be as likely a cause of "bad things" as the make-believe drugzez.
Cool story, bro.
"You do hear a lot of things," says one teacher at North Augusta High.
FUCK YOU, YOU FUCKING FUCK. GOD DAMN MOTHERFUCKING CUNTWHORE.
What? Public schools are pumping kids full of drugs to destroy their lives? Not really news, but yes, very "bad".
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