PaulW,
"Dutch coffee shops celebrate thirty year anniversary
By Pete Brady - Friday, August 16 2002
Amsterdam
Three decades ago, Wernard Bruining was a bit younger, a bit more adventurous than he is now.People call him "the father of the marijuana coffee shops." According to the Dutch government, there are approximately 850 of Wernard's "babies" officially operating in Holland, each one licensed to dispense marijuana and hashish.
Back in the day, Wernard and a group of friends ran what was then called a "tea house." In the US during the early 20th century the word "tea" was slang for marijuana.
Wernard's Amsterdam tea house, which he named Mellow Yellow, was more a social club than a stoner palace....People smoked it while discussing radical politics, communes, the Vietnam War, class warfare, saving the earth.
Holland has never been the kind of country that treats pot people like real criminals. The Dutch recognize that crimes are activities in which one person harms another person or that person's property-things like rape, murder, burglary, fraud.
Wernard's Mellow Yellow was pretty much the only real pot shop in town until around 1975, when the now-famous Bulldog and Rusland shops came on line.
With a newly-elected Dutch government making ugly noises about closing coffee shops, and the European Union trying to figure out if it will adopt or reject Holland's approach, Wernard admits to being a little nervous about the future of the experiment that he helped start so many years ago.
He urges smokers to use marijuana intelligently, to pay attention to reality, and to stand up for their rights. He and Van Schaik are conducting a series of formal classes that teach how to run classy cannabis shops, and he wants marijuana users to be classy too...."
The only progressive issue making significant progress is the anti- cannabis prohibition reform movement, imho. MPP, NORMl, mapinc.org and others follow related events and do a great job bringing the big picture to the public.
Richard Cowan likes to attribute the Prohibition laws to, "bad journalism". He's right.
The internet has changed that and people are getting better quality information, as a result.
I appreciate your comments, but Mr. Cowan's right about this. btw, kudos to Rob for allowing discussion of such a broad topic on Punaweb. It may not be strictly local, but it's a popular topic here in our little corner of the world
Aloha,
Lee
http://members.cruzio.com/~lionel/event