BTW: Message to ad
execs: Please Quit
As a nipper I knew about baddies. They were paunchy bald men wearing sloppy
trousers and horizontal striped T-shirts who squinted through eye masks.
Now it’s cyber crims. Clip-art shows a hooded figure hunched
over a laptop in a darkened cell, an image as silly as childhood’s imaginary
villains.
The 2019 evildoers wear sharp gear and work in fluro-saturated
studios. These keyboard jockeys move mice
faster than a scurrying rodent; they tap like Jakarta jazzman Joey Alexander hits the ivories.
Away from their domain we’d find them fine neighbors, happy
with community clean ups. Well mannered
and law-abiding, they join gyms rather than huddles of smokers’ on high-rise
forecourts.
Decent folk? Don’t be
deceived. They call themselves creatives and advertising account executives,
and have two jobs.
One is to financially cripple the poor. The other is to make
self-harm fun. In brief, they sell
suicide.
They use their talents to offer insecure boys dithering at masculinity’s
portal a cheap way to enter manhood. Like
the Devil’s pact with Faust, they swap fantasies for souls – and internal
organs.
Let’s put it more bluntly: They proffer loaded revolvers
suggesting the barrel be inserted in the mouth and the trigger pulled.
The metaphor is flawed because a bullet results in a speedy
death. Their product draws out the
agony, day by day, till the victim succumbs in a mess of bloody phlegm before horrified
friends and family.
There are many dreadful ways to die; preventable tobacco-caused
lung and heart diseases rival the Inquisition.
They’re the biggest killers in Indonesia.
And the kids are getting hooked. The number of under-18 smokers is rising. In
2013 it was 7.2 per cent; now its 9.1.
Were there high fives in the ad agencies when those figures came out?
Six in ten Indonesian men are addicts. They are druggies but don’t get arrested because their drug of choice is
nicotine. And the government says that’s
legal.
In those cities where the burghers care not a whit for their
youngsters’ health, giant billboards on roads leading to schools show the life
poor lads would love.
Most posters are arty – and artful. The adjectives are
tough-guy: Pro, strong, bold. Slim studs sweat in boxing rings and scramble
up mountains. To thrash rivals and snare coy maidens requires stamina; men must
not give up. It’s the definition of
machismo.
So the slogans read:
‘Don’t Quit’ or ‘Never Quit’.
The educated copy writers know ‘Quit’ is a magic word in the
West. It grew from an Australian doctor-led
campaign which the government eventually backed.
Outdoor tobacco ads disappeared in 1996 after public protests
which included defacing posters.
Shop displays are banned (packs hide in a closed cabinet),
and the health warning with a ghastly graphics of rotting bodies now covers 75
per cent of the plain package.
These
policies have had a thumping impact. In
the 1970s about 44 per cent of adult Australians smoked; that’s now down to 15
per cent. What’s gone up has been the expense
– from 40 cents a pack to around AUD 33 (Rp 330,000). The government tax take is 75 per cent.
That’s
15 times dearer than the same toxin will cost in Indonesia next year when the price
is likely to jump 35 per cent after a boost in excise.
To
be a smoker in Australia
you have to be rich or stupid – or both.
Hooked Indonesian users shrug off the government health warning Peringatan merokok membunuhmu (smoking
kills you) like they ignore traffic lights.
Anecdotes trump facts: All
inhalers know a Grandpop who smokes a pack a day and still pedals a pedicab.
As the world leader in combating tobacco Australia is loathed by Big
Baccy. Philip Morris took Australia to an
international tribunal to have the plan packaging laws declared illegal.It took seven years and AUD 24 million before the government won,
Indonesian politicians who want the kid killing stopped have
already been confronted by tobacco industry claims that thousands will be
thrown out of work if laws are tightened, particularly women.
That argument could be used for maintaining prostitution,
but the legislators say morality is more important than money.
Absolutely.
First published in The Jakarta Post 12 October 2019
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