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Not to Worry -- Concerns About Pot Coffee Houses in Amsterdam Have Gone up in Smoke

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marmar Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Dec-16-08 07:07 AM
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Not to Worry -- Concerns About Pot Coffee Houses in Amsterdam Have Gone up in Smoke
Dampkring RULES! .....and Greenhouse Effect is cool, too.....Light 'em if ya got 'em. :smoke: :smoke: :smoke:



via AlterNet:



Not to Worry -- Concerns About Pot Coffee Houses in Amsterdam Have Gone up in Smoke

By Phillip S. Smith, Drug War Chronicle. Posted December 12, 2008.

Despite the bluster of some of its members, the governing coalition in Holland is not going to touch cannabis policy.



For more than 30 years under the policy of "gedoogbeleid," which could best be translated as "pragmatic tolerance," the Dutch have allowed the sale of personal amounts of marijuana through the coffee house system, even though doing so is technically illegal. But lately, especially for those of us on this side of the water, a black cloud appears to be hovering over the coffee shops. The number of coffee shops has contracted from about 1,500 in 1995 to 720 now, as successive governments have tightened the screws. The current national government is hostile, if somewhat divided on the issue, and recent headlines about moves to close coffee shops in some border towns and reduce their numbers across the country add to the ominous picture.

But the picture is nowhere near as gloomy as presented by the occasional Reuters or Associated Press report covering such developments. Dutch cannabis policy is approaching a tipping point, the status quo is under pressure, but the end result is more likely to be the creation of a vertically-integrated legal cannabis production and sales industry than the end of the coffee houses and retreat back into prohibition.

Three parties in coalition form the national government: the Social Democrats (PvdA), the Christian Democrats (CDA), and Christian Unity (CU), a fundamentalist Christian Party. The two Christian parties oppose drug use in general and the coffee shop system in particular, and would like to see it go away. But the most powerful party in the coalition, the Social Democrats, is much less hostile, and even amenable to regulating cannabis production as well as retail sales.

While the Christian parties appear implacable in their opposition on moral grounds, the PvdA and the opposition parties are arguing more pragmatically over a pair of issues that have come to symbolize the "problems" of the coffee shops. One is the endless influx of cannabis buyers from neighboring countries with more repressive laws, who clog the city centers of border towns and sometimes deal with hard drug dealers and create public nuisances as well. The other major issue around the coffee shops is the "backdoor problem," wherein, while retail sales at the coffee shops are tolerated, the wholesale supply of cannabis to the coffee shops remains tethered to a criminal netherworld. .............(more)

The complete piece is at: http://www.alternet.org/drugreporter/112397/not_to_worry_--_concerns_about_pot_coffee_houses_in_amsterdam_have_gone_up_in_smoke/




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