@freemo Seriously? I hope the Dutch laws will never go batshit crazy and allow citizens to own assault weapons. As you might have noticed most people in Europe have a slightly different understanding of safety and guns when compared to the United States. We do not really believe in that "good guy with a gun" doing any good but we do see the insane number of mass shootings in the States. Strangely, these things rarely happen in Europe. I have no idea why... must be the #thoughtsandprayers. NOT.
@bikejourno My friend has a legal AR-15 rifle over here in his home in Holland. Its already legal, has been for a long time apparently though I dont know the laws, its certainly not as enlightened as the american system, but it seems to allow for ownership.
Yes I have noticed many europeans have a very "big brother" approach when it comes to peoples ownership of pretty much anything that would require maturity and safety (guns, fireworks, SCUBA diving, you name it), hopefully an attitude I hope to change in some of the europeaners I meet now that I live here.
@freemo The US are a pain when it comes to allowing e-bikes/pedelecs to the roads. The "big brother" steps in as soon as the holy car and its supremacy are being questioned. Those e-bikes seem to be so much more dangerous than guns.
Btw Switzerland has pretty liberal gun laws as well reg. ownership, but not regarding actually carrying guns or buying ammunition. Seeing folks openly carry guns in the public in the US is seriously disturbing for those who have not grown up with this *tradition*.
"The US are a pain when it comes to allowing e-bikes/pedelecs to the roads"
How so. In america an e-bike and regular bike needs no registration, no license plate, no yearly taxes, nothing. You buy it you can ride it, your good
By contrast in the netherlands if you want an e-bike then above a certain speed you need a license, license plate, everything, even the slower type of electric scooter needs a license plate and costs to get it.
Would seem of the two that the USA is far less big brother on electric scooters and e-bikes honestly.
@bikejourno Well you are right it is based on per state, but to make the claim they are more big brother than europe isnt really a fair or accurate comparison.
Yea a few states regulate it, and in those states the regulations arent particularly damning, they treat e-bikes as electric scooters, which actually makes some sense, the issue being they require a license for an electric scooter, which I agree is heavy handed.
But again in other states there is no restriction on e-bikes or electric scooters, and in the netherlands such things require licenses and registeration.
So no matter how you slice it your argument falls short. They certainly arent more big brother, they are at worst a little too big brother in some areas maybe. But nothing all that more damning than the norm in the Netherlands, and still a very isolated example for the most part either way.