The drug is an illegal substance; production, possession, and trade are a criminal offence. If you get caught you can be prosecuted. The last few years, authorities have been stricter on regulations. You will be searched at the entrance of clubs and festivals. One pill or more can lead to prosecution. However, in reality, a user amount of up to three pills often leads to the refusal of admission and seizure of the drugs.
These products are legal to buy and sell in the Netherlands and some other countries. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. You have a weird interpretation of some factual information my friend. Sir can we take xtc pills or mdma in summer??? If yes than how much temperature is suitable??
One of the risks is Hyperthermia. This means that your body is overheating. This risk increases as temperatures rise. Sign In Create Account. This Hedonistic Disneyland has escalated far beyond psychedelics and weed to become a city of speed.
April 23, , pm. A series reporting on the world's most extreme — and idiosyncratic — drug scenes. World News. Mike Power. Emma Garland. VICE Staff. If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences.
This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again. Home News. A police officer, a lawyer, a toxicologist, a philosopher, a pharmacist, a behavioural scientist and an anthropologist. It almost sounds like the run up to a terrible joke, but the opposite is true.
These and more experts bundled forces and shared their knowledge in order to take a look at the current MDMA policy in the Netherlands. Together they looked at 95 possible MDMA policy options, which were scored on 27 different outcomes, like their effects on health, crime, ethics, environmental impact, degree of use, international relations and more. These outcomes were all weighed differently, with public health and crime at the top of the list.
She explains that it had been quiet on this policy front for a while and it was time to get the conversation going again. Not all participants share in the results of the ThinkTank, however. The Dutch police publicly distanced themselves from the conclusion.
Suzanne van der Graaf, police spokesperson, explains that they felt like the discussion focussed more on legalisation rather than combating crime.
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