• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    2610 months ago

    With prostitution, it makes sense (if you want to criminalize it at all).
    You don’t want to criminalize people who are often pressured into prostitution, because that would cut them off from getting help or going to the police if they are abused.

    With weed, what the Dutch model tries to achieve is to not punish people for smoking weed, but also not turn it into a for-profit industry that would create an incentive to get more people addicted.
    I think the German model is better in this regard: Let supply also be legal, but non-commercial. But they went overboard with the regulations (police can get a list of all consumers at any time, without a court order or criminal suspicion). And it looks like the decriminalization will fail at the last minute anyway.

    • @baru
      link
      English
      1010 months ago

      With weed, what the Dutch model tries to achieve is to not punish people for smoking weed, but also not turn it into a for-profit industry that would create an incentive to get more people addicted.

      It’s more that there’s a lot of conservative parties that do not agree on the drug policy. E.g. enough Christian parties who would rather be more restrictive.

        • @Kyrgizion
          link
          English
          1110 months ago

          This is the reason that legalization in Belgium isn’t even remotely on the table. AB Inbev practically writes the law here.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      810 months ago

      AFAIK the Dutch model so far (consumption and sale somewhat allowed, but no growing or importing) has created huge criminal organisations that also started to do a lot of other crimes (bc what’s there to lose if you’re going to jail anyway basically) and a big goal in designing the new German law was to not mess it up like the Netherlands have

      • tb_
        link
        English
        110 months ago

        Dutch authorities started cracking down on small-time growers, which opened the (black) market up to large criminal organizations.