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Going To Amsterdam? Might Want To Go Soon.


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Dutch Want To Ban Foreigners from Coffee ShopsPosted by CN Staff on November 20, 2010 at 07:38:10 PT

By Phillip S. Smith

Source: AlterNet

 

cannabisicon.gif Amsterdam -- The newly elected rightist Dutch government said Wednesday it wants to bar foreigners from buying marijuana in the Netherlands' famous cannabis coffee shops. The move is part of a national crack down on drug use, a government spokesman said.

 

For more than 30 years, Holland has allowed the sale of small amounts of marijuana (currently up to five grams) in coffee shops, even though laws against marijuana possession technically remained on the books. In recent years, conservative governments have increasingly signaled their unhappiness with the status quo and have embarked on campaigns to reduce the number of coffee shops.

 

Dutch coffee shops are a popular tourist destination, especially with visitors from neighboring France, Germany, Belgium, and other countries with more repressive approaches to pot. But some border towns have already moved to bar foreigners, citing traffic, congestion, and public order problems.

 

On Wednesday, Dutch Security and Justice Minister Ivo Opstelten told NOS radio the governing coalition had agreed to limit marijuana sales to Dutch residents in order to curb crime linked to marijuana production and sales. "No tourist attractions," said Opstelten. "We don't like that."

 

But it is not "drug tourism" that creates crime around pot cultivation and distribution. Instead, it is Holland's half-baked approach to tolerating marijuana. The Dutch government allows for legal retail marijuana sales, but does not allow for a legal method of growing marijuana to supply the coffee shops. That leaves the door open for criminals to get involved in the trade.

 

While some border towns have already acted to bar foreigners, there is less enthusiasm for a ban in Amsterdam, home to some 223 coffee shops. The municipal government there said it was studying the government proposal. "We are taking the current practice as a starting point. It is not perfect but in many ways we have a functioning coffee shop system," an Amsterdam city spokesman said.

 

The "no foreigners" policy has not yet been formally drafted and no firm date for the ban has yet been set. But it looks like foreign pot smokers are about to join Muslims as persona non grata in the brave new Holland.

 

Read more of Phillip S. Smith's work at the Drug War Chronicle.

 

Source: AlterNet (US)

Author: Phillip S. Smith

Published: November 19, 2010

Copyright: 2010 Independent Media Institute

Contact: letters@alternet.org

Website: http://www.alternet.org/

URL: http://alternet.org/world/148936/ CannabisNews -- Cannabis Archives

http://cannabisnews.com/news/list/cannabis.shtml

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I hate to sound negative but I'd venture a guess over 50% of people that go to Amsterdam is to use marijuana there, if they do not allow non citizens 90% of thoes coffee shops are going to close and Amsterdam will no longer be a tourist hot spot like it is now. I guess I understand their "logic" but I think that would effectivly put Amsterdam off the map for americans and likewise.

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I was checking out this issue on another forum...

Yeah, I think it's fine for coffee shops to say locals only if they are having a lot of problems with out of towners coming in and causing a fuss. But I also think this will be a slam to the tourist industry that does often include a trip or two to the coffee shops.

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They seem to talk about this every few years, will never fly.

 

BINGO!

 

last time this waco Christan government tried this the coffeshop owners said they would have a person in every coffeshop with a t-shirt on saying 'I buy pot for foreigners'

 

the fact is they cannot afford to cut the head off of their cash cow. most citizens in the Netherlands do not work; they are supported by the government.

 

ex. if your an artist in the Netherlands you receive a weekly stipend for living cost; after they pay for all of you collage (and yes, you receive a stipend while in school also)

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