DARE Didn't Make Kids 'Say No' to Drugs. It Normalized Police in Schools.
DARE to Say No details the history of an anti-drug campaign that left an indelible mark on America.

There's no such thing as a universal millennial experience, but DARE comes close.
Starting in 1983, the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program sent police officers into classrooms to teach fifth- and sixth-graders about the dangers of drugs and the need, as Nancy Reagan famously put it, to "just say no." DARE embraced an abstinence-only model in which any use of alcohol or drugs qualified as abuse and the only acceptable tactic was to abstain. Upon completing the 17-week program, students received a certificate and a T-shirt.
At its height, over 75 percent of American schools participated in the program, costing taxpayers as much as $750 million per year. Historian Max Felker-Kantor revisits DARE and its legacy in DARE to Say No: Policing and the War on Drugs in Schools, a new history of the program.
As a DARE graduate myself who wore the T-shirt long after it was fashionable (look, I liked the austere black-and-red color scheme), I vaguely recall presentations given by someone from the local police department. On one occasion, he told a student to act drunk and pretend to offer the class beer, while the rest of us screamed at her in reply. Another time, our officer-instructor went on a tangent about how "girls are just tougher these days," before presumably tying it back to why it was imperative that we 10- and 11-year-olds resist any entreaties to shoot up heroin in our rural Georgia schoolyard. I recently learned to my horror that my wife won a poetry contest in her DARE program in Alaska—a poem that she then, mortified, had to read aloud during the DARE graduation ceremony.
In hindsight, DARE is primarily remembered as a joke, a bunch of cops acting out hokey anti-drug skits. By 1994, a decade after the program's founding, studies clearly indicated that the DARE curriculum had little to no effect on rates of youth drug use. By the 2010s, it had become a popular source of irony and parody: When then–Attorney General Jeff Sessions praised the program's effectiveness in 2017, DARE graduates noted on social media how they still smoke pot in their black-and-red shirts.
But while DARE didn't "work" in the sense of keeping many kids from using drugs, Felker-Kantor argues the program was wildly successful at normalizing the presence of police, and the war on drugs, in people's everyday lives.
DARE was the brainchild of Daryl Gates, the same police chief who gave us SWAT teams. The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) had spent a decade sending undercover officers into schools, arresting thousands of dealers—the majority of them minors—but drug use among students actually increased. "After years of dealer arrests did little to reduce the demand for drugs, police leadership all but admitted the impossibility of curtailing drug use through enforcement alone," Felker-Kantor writes. With DARE, Gates' department would target demand instead of supply. "But instead of relinquishing the task to another agency, LAPD officials expanded the remit of police to include working directly with kids, creating an educational program that required the presence of officers in schools as teachers."
This was DARE's differentiating factor, and its fundamental flaw. The undercover program may have been overly aggressive and ineffectual, but it also clearly delineated the roles of officer and teacher; DARE blurred those lines. DARE officers were explicitly trained to act as educators, not as law enforcement, and they were billed to students as "trusted confidants." But they didn't check their badges at the schoolhouse door; they showed up in uniform (sometimes with their service weapon, though that was against the rules), and officials like Gates defined their role within a law enforcement framework.
DARE to Say No posits that improving the public's perception of police was at least as important to DARE's mission as keeping kids off drugs. Police departments had to carefully consider whom among their ranks could participate, as "a qualified DARE officer was the linchpin not only for reducing drug use but also for transforming public perceptions of the police and reshaping the relationship between the police and communities."
Much of the program was therefore driven by politics rather than any proven methods of reducing drug use. When crack dominated headlines, the DARE curriculum adapted its narrative, preaching about the perils of "crack babies" in the "inner cities'' even though, as Felker-Kantor writes, "many kids and teenagers, according to the LAPD's own data, had experimented with alcohol or marijuana, not crack cocaine." In the 1990s, as the public worried about gang violence and "superpredators," DARE changed its iconic "DARE To Keep Kids Off Drugs" slogan to the clunkier "DARE To Resist Drugs and Violence."
This disconnect between the program's stated goals and its actions was most apparent in lower-income communities of color, which tended to have more antagonistic relationships with the police. DARE provided a blueprint to present cops as role models to kids while still aggressively prosecuting the drug war against their parents.
And prosecute parents they did: DARE's history is full of stories in which students told an officer about a parent's drug use only to find that parent in handcuffs later. In one egregious example, a guidance counselor asked 11-year-old Crystal Grendell if her parents used drugs; assured, as she later recalled, that "nothing would happen," Crystal admitted that her parents smoked marijuana. Days later, Felker-Kantor writes, "three DARE officers interrogated Crystal about her parents' drug habits and asked her to report back on the number of marijuana plants in her home." One officer told her that her parents would be arrested unless she cooperated and that she shouldn't tell her parents about the interrogation since "often parents beat their children after the children talk to police." When Crystal cooperated, Felker-Kantor recounts, police "raided her home, arrested her parents, and took Crystal and her younger sister to a distant relative's house because the police had failed to find arrangements for the girls prior to the raid."
Grendell's family later successfully sued the department—with a court finding the officers' "coercive" actions "shocking to the conscience and unworthy of constitutional protection"—but the program's officials were undeterred. "In such environments, there are usually no morals, values or training for the child," one DARE administrator is quoted as saying. "My personal opinion is that an arrest is the best thing that could ever happen to that parent."
In the 1990s, groups like Parents Against DARE sprung up to oppose the curriculum. "Although skeptical of DARE's effectiveness," Felker-Kantor writes, "Parents Against DARE was more concerned with the loss of parental control and the state's potential surveillance of the family via their children-as-informants." DARE, which enjoyed broad public support in its first decade, gradually lost its luster, and schools began dropping the program in the mid-'90s.
The class of congressional Republicans elected in 1994 talked about cutting social programs, and DARE was one possible target. But by this point, DARE was too ingrained in American culture to kill outright, and most politicians were too afraid of looking "soft" on child drug abuse to try. The National Institute of Justice lists 2009 as the program's end date, but it actually still exists, albeit on a smaller scale. The officer-instructor is still the central figure. This, in fact, has been the program's lasting legacy: As schools began to adopt resource officers after the 1999 Columbine school shooting, the DARE cop proved the perfect template. As DARE officers gave way to permanent school resource officers, or SROs, the integration between schools and police was complete.
Felker-Kantor sometimes gets lost on ideological tangents, blaming "neoliberalism" for both DARE and the drug war. But his book mostly steers clear of broad political pronouncements. Instead, it provides a comprehensive history of a program whose glory days may be behind it but that left an indelible mark on America—and not just as a target of mockery.
DARE to Say No: Policing and the War on Drugs in Schools, by Max Felker-Kantor, The University of North Carolina Press, 288 pages, $27.95
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Maybe we should normalize troops in schools, like in Littlerock in 1957.
The KKK didn't even bother to show up to shoot up the place like they threatened to!
Is there a lesson to be learned from this?
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You have been grandfathered in for a temporary period. In the near future, you should subscribe here [insert subscribe link here] before testing your ability to comment.
I posted yesterday and it didn’t show up but I was too busy to see if it was a one off.
Guess I’m still here!
Yes, Are Mack Who Talks and Snorts Smack, you DO test the patience of sensible and benevolent readers here!
Grooming children to be pro authoritarian just before they went home to watch the news with their parents, during which time they were shown crime = super predator black kids (in Biden’s racial jungle).
“Marihuana influences Negroes to look at white people in the eye, step on white men's shadows and look at a white woman twice.” - Harry J. Anslinger
We all know what the dictionary definition of genocide is… right?
I grew up overseas going to "international schools", Jakarta International school, International school of Kuala Lumpur, etc. Basically schools for Ambassador's kids and rich ex-pats. All the teachers were western, (american or british or australian). Because ambassador's kids are kidnap targets, and this was in the third world, security was everywhere. Walls around the campus, guard towers, every morning the guards checked under the bus for bombs. It wasn't like prison, all the guards were always extremely nice to us. But still, this is the security uncle Sam pays for, for rich kids. Almost all tuition was paid for with tax dollars.
DARE embraced an abstinence-only model in which any use of alcohol or drugs qualified as abuse and the only acceptable tactic was to abstain.
As if the whole "Sex ed to third graders" movement wasn't retarded enough, Joe Lancaster says, "Hold my beer." and advocates the state-sponsored message of "Try coke, speed, LSD, and maybe heroin... but only a couple of times. Nothing *too* out-of-control." to 5th graders.
Zero tolerance of alcohol doesn't work for Catholic kids who sip wine as part of church service. It certainly doesn't work for their older siblings and parents. DARE was an epic debacle at my junior high as they didn't get 10% of the kids to sign the pledge. You are so out of touch.
mad strawmans Joe, Homer strawmans mad, and the internet keeps on a chugging.
Dare was a program for 5th graders btw, not jr high.
But yes, dare *was* a joke to 5th graders too, who all *did* sign and went on to eventually *not* be teetotalers.
mad strawmans Joe
The article is a retarded straw man or collection of them. There isn't any sort of call for ending the funding for the DOE or supporting school choice here. So we aren't talking about any sort of real libertarian axiom as much as getting Joe's "hold my beer" take that having cops and teachers, as part of a public school program, tell kids not to engage in violence and/or drug use is somehow bad... even by libertarian standards.
Which, as indicated, given that we have to pass laws telling 3rd grade math teachers not to give BJ lessons, is a laughably retarded position.
The more I think about the piece, this feels a bit like Winston from Minitrue just doing his job.
I don't recall anyone taking the D.A.R.E. program or pledge seriously and I grew up in a pretty favorable region. I certainly don't recall anyone getting arrested for it. Certainly not on par with the number of kids I know who died from drug use directly, wrapped their cars around trees with a BAC > 0, or effectively stoned their way onto public welfare.
Given the sparsity of events over the course of three decades and the more contemporary abundance of widespread and far more egregious abuse by public health, advisory administrative bureaucracies, and/or LEOs, this story feels very much like an "Every record has been destroyed or falsified, every book rewritten, every picture has been repainted, every statue and street building has been renamed, every date has been altered. And the process is continuing day by day and minute by minute. History has stopped. Nothing exists except an endless present in which the Party is always right." effort.
There are other possibilities, you know.
You mean like cops, adults, schoolteachers, and even your local pastor might actually believe that it's OK to have a couple drinks or a few hits on the bong, especially in the privacy of your own home, as long as you aren't giving yourself cirrhosis and driving around stoned out of your gourd... but that's probably not the best message to send to 5th and 6th graders? Huh. I never would've made the connection. Thanks, Zeb.
My motto has always been "Just say maybe".
Exactly. "Just say no" without knowing what you're saying "no" to is essentially saying, "believe all women"... assuming you're a biologist. Live your life by the three M's: Maybe, Moderation and Motherfucking (someone else's mother, not your own).
All things in moderation.
Moderation is a thing.
Therefore....
Yes, including moderation.
Every so often I don't drink responsibly at all and get wasted. Used to do that with weed but I'm too old for that.
"DARE to think for yourself" was a popular shirt in high school.
Have you ever tried doing so?
I give up, what connection to neoliberalism could be drawn?
None. Dare was something Nancy Reagan supported. Thus it became the equivalent of baptism for Republicans.
Anyone else remember 2019-2021, when kids were kept wholly out of school and cops were going around arresting people, adults, for running in public parks, going to the gym, and sitting in the parking lot outside church?
I don't recall Joe's exact take, but I'm pretty sure that he thinks that I... as an unvaccinated individual who opposed lockdowns, passports, and even the vaccine when Trump put up the money to pay for it up front... I *owed him* amnesty at one point.
Compared to that, teachers and cops showing up once or twice a year and taking the time to say "Don't do drugs, if you do, don't hurt anyone else. Abstain from sex, if you don't use protection. Lastly, cough into your elbow and wash your hands after using the restroom and/or before you eat." seems *exceedingly* benign (LEO die hards enforcing the law, any law, like LEO die hards notwithstanding.)
I'd certainly agree that, ideally, parents more or less dictate acceptable substance use to their kids (without hurting anybody else) and there be no need for school but that's not the world we live in nor is it the world Joe's proposing.
DARE’s history is full of stories in which students told an officer about a parent’s drug use only to find that parent in handcuffs later. In one egregious example,
Does this story end with the unarmed wife and mother being shot in the head while holding an infant in her arms or the entire compound, with women and children inside, burning to the ground?
Because if it doesn’t, I’ve seen and heard worse from the era specifically aimed at benign legal action and I’m struggling to care about a smattering of even more loosely correlated and relatively benign false arrests over the span of *checks notes* [mumbles Holy Shit! Really? to self] three decades.
I was rooming with a gal who had a school aged kid that was subjected to DARE. She was a smoker so it was ok for me to smoke my pipe in the apartment. It was the 90s dude. We could smoke in coffee shops and bars. Perkins had a smoking section.
Anyhow I had a nice Mirscham pipe and used that when I smoked, tobacco only. Weed would mess up the look. The gals kid told the DARE cops that "mommy's roommate has one like that." Pointing to their array of pipes, many just normal briar pipes. Fortunately the gal was there and quickly explained it was a tobacco pipe. Else we might have had a no knock warrent and some face down in the cat hair carpet time.
DARE came to my sixth grade class. I didn’t know that drugs existed until that time. They told me about a drug called Ecstasy and I made it a personal mission to get my hands on that. Took me until 10th grade. Thanks to the government for helping me!
Drug use by children dropped significantly when the DARE program operated and kids were told “Just say no.” https://www.crimeandconsequences.blog/?p=10266#more-10266
This opinion simply ignores the facts