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Crystal Campaigns Spark Mixed Reactions
Bay Area Reporter, November 2004
The San Francisco Department of Health's "Crystal Mess"
advertisements - which depict harsh images of crystal methamphetamine
addicts - provoked mixed reactions when recently displayed at the Castro
Muni transit station. Some anonymous people wrote or plastered remarks
against the campaign directly on the advertisements. Comments included
"Don't shame me," "Not a Villain Not a Victim" and
"No love, no compassion, no pride."
"The ads were not meant to judge anybody,"
said Steven Tierney, SFHD's director of HIV prevention. "From the
response we have gotten, a lot of people recognize themselves or their
friends in the ads. That is who the ads were designed for," he said.
"It's not really a negative message,"
said one former meth addict at a community forum hosted by the Stop AIDS
Project. "It is the reality of what speed does. I loved it,"
said the recovering addict who thought the city ads were "like looking
in the mirror."
Some two dozen men and one woman attending the Stop
AIDS forum gave their input to help that organization's own "Are
you up to speed?" campaign. This effort is set to launch in January;
some images have already been made public. In November, SAP displayed
posters noting that men who use speed are 400 percent more likely to acquire
HIV than nonusers. The "Are you up to speed?" campaign focuses
on meth's negative impacts on gay men's health, with the hope of making
meth unpopular in the community and targets non-users or light users more
than addicts. SAP is forming a community advisory board to help develop
messages for its campaign.
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