• SteefLem
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    12
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    11 months ago

    No we wont. We are making some of the same mistakes as other countries do like make it more and more and more illegal instead of loosening some of the drug laws. But here the goverment thinks if something is a little bad (even fireworks or some trivial shit) we need to outlaw it immediately make it more illegal. We tend to want to ban everything that even a small group complains about (and i mean like 100 ppl or something) because that always works… right? But then again the government was mostly conservatives and old grey christians. (Maybe that will change /s) Oh i forgot, we are not the relaxed country anymore that we were 20’years ago. Now they just want more more more more MORE laws because, well thats the sollution to everything? We call it “betutteling” and its rampend

    • @[email protected]
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      611 months ago

      We are making some of the same mistakes as other countries do like make it more and more and more illegal instead of loosening some of the drug laws.

      That’s exactly why she says the Netherlands risks becoming a narco-state. Well, that, and other countries doing the same:

      The challenges we now face in the Netherlands are not an indictment of our liberal drug policy. Rather the opposite. Take the Dutch government’s approach to MDMA, influenced by the global war on drugs, which has become increasingly repressive since the late 1980s and early 90s. Under international pressure, the Netherlands placed MDMA, which is known as a party drug and perceived as relatively harmless, under the Opium Act in 1988, classifying it as a hard drug. This shift inadvertently contributed to the profitability of illegal MDMA production and created a lucrative business model for criminal organisations, as evidenced by the estimated €18.9bn street value of annual ecstasy production in the Netherlands. This experience reveals how efforts to align with global drug prohibition trends can have counterproductive outcomes.

      What the Netherlands’ problems reveal is the need for a global shift in the current approach. It’s not a matter of retracting our user-centred policy, but rather advocating for international recognition that the war on drugs is counterproductive.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      311 months ago

      even fireworks or some trivial shit

      As someone who had part of a fireworks display literally drop on their head 6 days ago: Yeah, it looks cool, but everything that goes up, has to go down eventually. Might want to keep that in mind when handing out rockets left, right and center.

      We call it “betutteling” and its rampend

      Never thought about where “betütteln” originated from but now that you mention it: Yep, that sounds like something a “swamp German” would say.

      • SteefLem
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        111 months ago

        “ As someone who had part of a fireworks display literally drop on their head 6 days ago: Yeah, it looks cool, but everything that goes up, has to go down eventually. Might want to keep that in mind when handing out rockets left, right and center.”

        Ok so we should just ban everything then? Because that always works?

        “ Never thought about where “betütteln” originated from but now that you mention it: Yep, that sounds like something a “swamp German” would say.”

        Yeah its funny how many of these kinda words end up almost the same in german/swedish/dutch. Then again swamp germans? Haha