Stvarno je smesno to sto pises Dimkovicu.
Pakujes cinjenice tako da naizgled idu u prilog tvojim tvrdnjama.
Citat:
In the Netherlands 9.7% of young adults (aged 15-24) consume soft drugs once a month, comparable to the level in Italy (10.9%) and Germany (9.9%) and less than in the UK (15.8%) and Spain (16.4%), but much higher than in, for example, Sweden (3%), Finland or Greece. Dutch rates of drug use are lower than U.S. rates in every category. The monthly prevalence of drugs other than cannabis among young people (15-24) was 4% in 2004, that was above the average (3%) of 15 compared countries in EU
Mozes ti da pises o HIV-u, americkim tinejdzerima koji se opijaju do besvjesti ili bilo cemu drugom sto nema veze sa temom.
Cinjenica je vise nego fuck'n jasna da legalizacija lakih droga u Holandiji nije dala zeljene rezultate!!!
To sto si ti video je tvoja stvar.
Ovo je zvanicni podatak, dakle, dosta relevantniji od tvog povrsnog prebrojavanja coffee shop-ova po Amsterdamu i ispovracanih dokova u baltickim zemljama.
Evo jos podataka
Drug- related expenditure per capita in EUR and as percentage of GDP
Per capita % of GDP
Netherlands 139 0.66
Sweden 107 0.47
Ko je prvi na tabeli, a ima losije rezultate? Kongo?
Upotreba droga u SW:
Other
2.4%
Sedatives
9.0%
Cocaine
2.0%
Amphetamine
35.1%
Cannabis
19.5%
Ecstasy
0.5%
Opiates
31.5%
Citat:
Life-time prevalence of drug use among 15-16 year old students declined from 15 per cent in 1971
to 3 per cent in 1989. Past month prevalence rates showed an even steeper decline, falling by 90
per cent over the same period, from 5 per cent to 0.5 per cent.
Citat:
Two Dutch towns said they planned to close their cannabis smoking coffee shops after admitting that an influx of up to 25,000 French and Belgian "drug tourists" each week had become too much.
Local authorities in south-west Roosendaal and Bergen-op-Doom announced they could no longer cope with the "drug tourists" whose presence they blamed for traffic congestion, crime and unlicensed dealing.
"Soft drug tourism is the motor of criminality linked to (harder) drugs," they said in a joint statement.
"It has an overwhelming negative effect on public order."
All eight coffee shops in the two towns will shut, with closures beginning in February 2009.
"The mayor of Roosendaal thinks we could close them all within two years," town hall spokeswoman Marjolein Koppens said.
Until then, all local coffee shops will be forced to limit the sale of cannabis to two grams per customer per day, instead of the current five grams.
Liberal drugs laws in the Netherlands allow people to carry five grams of marijuana on their person without being prosecuted.
Another border town, Terneuzen, announced it would toughen its local by-laws on the sale of cannabis from May next year.
Opening hours would be restricted and the amount each customer could buy would also be reduced.
Jel' se bese neko zalagao za drug turizam? Da stranci dolaze i duvaju kod nas? Nekoliko strana unazad.
Evo lepog primera kakve je to rezultate dalo.