"We must do all we can to empower parents and communities to protect our youth and to encourage healthy behavior free from binge drinking and other forms of alcohol abuse"
About this Quote
Policy talk disguised as family talk: Corzine’s line recruits “parents and communities” as the moral front line while keeping government in the role of facilitator, not disciplinarian. That’s the intent. It’s a politician’s balancing act between public-health urgency and American suspicion of the nanny state. By saying “empower,” he signals action without specifying coercion; empowerment can mean grants, school programs, enforcement partnerships, or just another brochure campaign. The word is useful precisely because it’s elastic.
The subtext is about blame and buy-in. Put the responsibility on parents and “communities” and you distribute accountability widely enough that no single institution has to admit failure. It also softens the edge of regulation: you’re not policing teenagers, you’re “protecting our youth.” That possessive “our” is doing work, too. It invites voters to experience alcohol abuse not as an individual lapse but as a collective vulnerability - the kind of framing that makes funding, legislation, and policing feel like care rather than control.
Contextually, this sits squarely in late-20th/early-21st-century governance where health issues are packaged as behavior issues. “Healthy behavior free from binge drinking” blends a medical register (“abuse”) with a lifestyle register (“healthy”), implying that the problem is both pathology and choice. Pairing binge drinking with “other forms” expands the target beyond frat-party spectacle to a broader spectrum of drinking norms, positioning the speaker as serious and comprehensive while leaving room to pivot: education when that polls well, enforcement when that headlines well.
The subtext is about blame and buy-in. Put the responsibility on parents and “communities” and you distribute accountability widely enough that no single institution has to admit failure. It also softens the edge of regulation: you’re not policing teenagers, you’re “protecting our youth.” That possessive “our” is doing work, too. It invites voters to experience alcohol abuse not as an individual lapse but as a collective vulnerability - the kind of framing that makes funding, legislation, and policing feel like care rather than control.
Contextually, this sits squarely in late-20th/early-21st-century governance where health issues are packaged as behavior issues. “Healthy behavior free from binge drinking” blends a medical register (“abuse”) with a lifestyle register (“healthy”), implying that the problem is both pathology and choice. Pairing binge drinking with “other forms” expands the target beyond frat-party spectacle to a broader spectrum of drinking norms, positioning the speaker as serious and comprehensive while leaving room to pivot: education when that polls well, enforcement when that headlines well.
Quote Details
| Topic | Parenting |
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