Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
SPECIAL REPORT: Behind the Neo-Prohibition Campaign
April 10, 2003
By: Dan Mindus, Senior Analyst
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America’s anti-alcohol movement is composed of dozens of overlapping community
groups, research institutions, and advocacy organizations, but they are brought
together and given direction by one entity: the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF).
Based in Princeton, New Jersey, the RWJF has spent more than $265 million
between 1997 and 2002 to tax, vilify, and restrict access to alcoholic
beverages. Nearly every study disparaging alcohol in the mass media, every
legislative push to limit marketing or increase taxes, and every supposedly
“grassroots” anti-alcohol movement was conceived and coordinated at the RWJF’s
headquarters. Thanks to this one foundation, the U.S. anti-alcohol movement
speaks with one voice.
For the RWJF, it is an article of faith that diminishing per capita consumption
across the board can contain the social consequences of alcohol abuse.
Therefore, it has engaged in a long-term war to reduce overall drinking by all
Americans. The RWJF relentlessly audits its own programs, checking to see if
each dollar spent is having the maximum impact on reducing per capita
consumption. Over the past 10 years, this blueprint has been refined. Increased
taxes, omnipresent roadblocks, and a near total elimination of alcohol marketing
are just a few of the tactics the RWJF now employs in its so-called
“environmental” approach.
The environmental approach seeks to shift blame from the alcohol abuser to
society in general (and to alcohol providers in particular). So the RWJF has
turned providers into public enemy number one, burdening them with restrictions
and taxes to make their business as difficult and complex as possible. The
environmental approach’s message to typical consumers, meanwhile, is that
drinking is abnormal and unacceptable. The RWJF seeks to marginalize drinking by
driving it underground, away from mainstream culture and public places.
The RWJF funds programs that focus on every conceivable target, at every level
from local community groups to state and federal legislation. Every demographic
group is targeted: women, children, the middle class, business managers,
Hispanics, Blacks, Whites, Native Americans. Every legal means is used:
taxation, regulation, litigation. Every PR tactic: grassroots advocacy, paid
advertising, press warfare. Every conceivable location: college campuses,
sporting events, restaurants, cultural activities, inner cities, residential
neighborhoods, and even bars.
The RWJF scored a major victory in 2000 with a federal .08 BAC mandate, and can
claim credit for restrictions on alcohol in localities all over the country. But
its $265 million has accomplished much more: it has put in place all the
elements required for more sweeping change. This includes a vast network of
local community organizations, centers for technical support, a compliant press,
and a growing body of academic literature critical of even moderate alcohol
consumption. The next highly publicized study or angry local movement may now
reach the “tipping point” where the RWJF-funded anti-alcohol agenda snowballs
into the kind of orchestrated frenzy the tobacco industry knows well.
For the full report in PDF format
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