Moral panic is a strong emotion formed throughout the population while coping with threatening problems related to changes in social order. In order to spread the moral panic to the community, we must always pay attention to the negative actions of people and people or society. An age approval law was enacted to avoid moral panic attempts to reduce children 's social concerns and child' s sexual behavior to protect children 's innocence. Children must comply with the law being enforced to protect them.
Create, spread, and sustain. The modern model of Goode and Ben-Yehuda defines elements of moral panic which further expands our understanding of how moral panic can happen. The concept of moral panic helps to understand social structure, social process, social change by clarifying social norms and moral boundaries (Potter and Kappeler, 1998). Moral panic theory emphasizes social response to specific realistic or perceived threats of "positioning, position, profit, ideology and value" (Cohen, 1972: 191).
Previous research on the study of moral panic theory has explored why and how to create a moral panic. However, few studies use five criteria to define an ethical panic to check whether moral panic occurs in a drug panic. In addition, the impact of ethical panic on substance abuse has been largely ignored affecting race and class influences. The lack of attention to race or class is surprising since Mann and Zatz (2002), as media generally relies on racial stereotypes in reporting crime. In this research, the theory of moral panic was expanded by examining the drug structure of the print medium from the viewpoint of color and socio - economic status. Based on the analysis of the content of the four major newspapers, I looked to see if the racial and category of cocaine and methamphetamine users had influenced the description of the medication on the print media, and whether it would affect the official correspondence It was.
Goode and Ben-Yehuda (1994) published a moral panic to study how this panic can occur in drug abuse. Furthermore, limited attention has been paid to the role of race and class in the onset of drug panic moral panic. This research attempts to fill this gap in literature. We tried to improve the moral panic theory by using Goode and Ben-Yehuda's model to identify ethical panic factors and considering the effects of race and class on the medication description of the media. More specifically, I analyzed the contents of four major newspapers from 1985 to 1987 and from 2001 to 2003, whether the racial and category of cocaine and methamphetamine users affected the print medium I checked it. The representative nature of these drugs, and whether these explanations affect the official response