rostasi Posted September 21, 2005 Report Posted September 21, 2005 http://tinyurl.com/bryxj Dutch police and park rangers have admitted they are powerless to stop a growing trend of outdoor sex orgies. In the latest incident, a large group of people were found romping naked on a beach in the Bussloo area of the country. They including 10 couples who were being "particularly boisterous" with each other while the others watched. But police called to the scene admitted they were powerless to act despite numerous complaints from other beach users, and could only give the naked orgy lovers a verbal warning. The head of one of Holland's biggest national parks says the problem is getting worse and has called for the government to make clear guidelines on outdoor sex orgies to allow police to act. Eric Droogh, who is director at the Veluwe National Park, said: "A national debate on wild sex parties in the countryside is essential. "Police and park wardens currently have too little scope to intervene. The only possibility is to catch the transgressors red-handed. "Outdoor sex is now commonly occurring in national parks and other public places. In some cases they just stopped beside the road in the picnic area or a meadow for the orgies." He called for clearer guidelines and sanctions to deal with the outdoor sex phenomenon. Quote
Ron S Posted September 21, 2005 Report Posted September 21, 2005 A national debate on wild sex parties in the countryside is essential. Absolutely! Quote
RDK Posted September 21, 2005 Report Posted September 21, 2005 Are they aware of the erect pink bunny? Quote
Ron S Posted September 21, 2005 Report Posted September 21, 2005 Don't confuse national pastimes with national monuments. Quote
Johnny E Posted September 21, 2005 Report Posted September 21, 2005 And in related Dutch News: Dutch talk show reporter to use heroin on TV AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) — A field reporter for a new Dutch television talk show plans to use heroin and other illegal drugs on the air during the weekly program on issues that concern young people, producers said Wednesday. The announcement of Shoot Up and Swallow, scheduled to premiere as a late-night show Oct. 10, sparked an outcry. Even in the liberal Netherlands, where marijuana is sold and used openly, the proposed drug use by reporter Filemon Wesselink is illegal. "This is dangerous and it sets a bad example," said Pieter Heerma, spokesman for the governing center-right Christian Democrat party. "We're going to ask the justice minister for his view on what the law says about this, and his view on the dangers and risks involved." Justice Ministry spokesman Ivo Hommes said it was not immediately clear whether Wesselink could be prosecuted. Possession of any amount of heroin is illegal, but in practice police usually do not arrest anyone with less than a half gram of the highly addictive narcotic. "The actual taking of drugs is a health problem, not a criminal act, though it's obviously hard to take drugs without possessing them first," Hommes said. "In any case, it's not something we endorse, and doing it on television is undesirable." The show's in-studio host, Sophie Hilbrand, will interview guests about drug use and abuse, while Wesselink appears in segments taped in the field as he experiments with drugs and liquor. Another reporter, Ties Van Westing, will do segments about engaging in sex acts, but not on camera. For one episode, Wesselink, 26, plans to smoke heroin, said Ingrid Timmer, spokeswoman for the show's producer, BNN. For others, he plans to go on a drinking binge in a series of pubs and to take the hallucinogenic drug LSD — on his couch under the supervision of his mother. "It's not our intention to create an outcry. We just want to talk about subjects that are part of young people's lives," Timmer said. The Netherlands is known for its lenient marijuana policy, under which the sale and use of the drug in small quantities are not prosecuted even though technically illegal. Other drugs, including heroin, LSD, cocaine and Ecstasy, are outlawed, and dealers are prosecuted. The legal age for consumption of alcohol and tobacco is 16. According to the Trimbos Institute, a Dutch group that monitors international drug use, the Dutch are about average among industrial nations. It says 6% of Dutch have used marijuana recently, compared with 8% in the United States, 8% in Britain and 9% in France. For cocaine, it was 1.1% in Holland — and rising quickly — compared to 1.3% in the United States, 1.5.% in Britain and 0.3% in France. Comparable data for heroin were not available. BNN has drawn viewer complaints for previous shows, including one that included a segment on how to have sex in a nightclub. Damn I got move to the Netherlands. Quote
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