Dutch systems that might just be the best......

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  • Опубликовано: 6 окт 2024

Комментарии • 382

  • @aesluis8584
    @aesluis8584 3 года назад +57

    You forgot to mention our "Delta plan" or Delta werken. How we managed to stay above water is by far the best system in the world.

    • @reiniervanderhorst8099
      @reiniervanderhorst8099 3 года назад +2

      That isn't the kind of system she is talking about

    • @emilys7834
      @emilys7834 3 года назад +2

      I agree, this system is super impressive! To me, it ties also into Dutch engineering and preparation/determination to deal with climate change. And as someone from a city that is increasingly dealing with huge costly floods, I find the Delta Plan really inspiring and something that should inspire more in the world.
      As another type of infrastructure, the design of cities to encourage biking, walking, and taking public transit is also very cool. I love watching the channel Not Just Bikes for this.

  • @ramonschliszka6332
    @ramonschliszka6332 3 года назад +106

    Funny how people from outside our country always identify “the gouvernement” as a party in our social constructs. Yes the gouvernement does a lot of the coordination but please note the gouvernement does not have any funds of it’s own. We need to be aware continuously that WE are the gouvernement. Making the gouvernement some kind of abstract party with magical powers is dangerous to the existence and continuous succes of our social constructs (not to be mistaken for socialism). So please, money or funds never come from “the gouvernement”. Funds are raised by taxes paid by natural persons and businesses that actually add value to the economy. 👍. Loved your video, looking forward to the next.

    • @mlenting1391
      @mlenting1391 3 года назад +5

      Zo waar 🇳🇱👍🏻👍🏻🇳🇱

    • @dutchyjhome
      @dutchyjhome 3 года назад +2

      Yes indeed, this is the case ! The only income of the government is tax, and tax is being paid by every Dutch citizen and Dutch company. So in the end we still pay for it (indirectly though) for the most part ourselves. The only external contribution to this all are the Dutch companies and all their different kinds of taxes which they're paying here.
      No worries mate, you just can't know this all, I most certainly love your video's and please continue making them ;-)

    • @nagranoth_
      @nagranoth_ 3 года назад +1

      You do realize that _every_ government gets it's funds from taxation (maybe some government owned production)?
      And that _every_ (real) democracy has it's government chosen by it's citizens. Per definition?
      Everyone understands that when someone says the government pays for something, this money comes from taxation.
      This does not need explaining.
      The point was that a part of the money is _directly_ payed to health insurance by people themselves, and a part of the money comes _indirectly_ through taxation. And the part that is paid directly gives people some level of choice.

    • @xTycho
      @xTycho 3 года назад

      @@nagranoth_ I mean NA education lawl

    • @Ctrl_Del_0
      @Ctrl_Del_0 3 года назад

      In a democracy a government holds nothing of it's own. It only regulates and controls incomes and expenditure from and towards the people. The Dutch government does this quite well compared to other countries. The bigger picture of how this is done is determined by "the people".

  • @DeSjeft
    @DeSjeft 3 года назад +52

    I like these kind of videos. For me it just reaffirms that there is no country in the world where i'd rather live than in the Netherlands.

  • @reinierhooijman3261
    @reinierhooijman3261 3 года назад +119

    As of 2023 statiegeld will also be implemented for bevarage cans to reduce litter on the streets and protect nature!

    • @kerrermanisNL
      @kerrermanisNL 3 года назад +3

      Nice, didn't know about that

    • @shrike6259
      @shrike6259 3 года назад +3

      @Kees Koolmees cans go into recyle bin already. it's a waste of effort. i bike and walk all the time trough the neighborhoods. never see cans down the road. it's just feel good buzz words.

    • @bobosims1848
      @bobosims1848 3 года назад +2

      Grandioos! Ik had geen idee! Ik zal mijn geplette blikjes opsparen tot die tijd :) (geintje!)

    • @dawnmaster68
      @dawnmaster68 3 года назад +5

      @@shrike6259 ever biked up onto an onramp of a highway?

    • @GeorgeSaint666
      @GeorgeSaint666 3 года назад +1

      And about time! Finally the freeways wont be open world trashcans anymore! Lets hope it improofs from idiots throwing stuff out of the window while driving!

  • @lordsleepyhead
    @lordsleepyhead 3 года назад +28

    "Kraamzorg" is fantastic. It's lead to something Dutch parents call the "Baby Bubbel" and it basically means those blissful 7 to 10 days after the birth of your child where you just stay home and have everything taken care of while you enjoy your little miracle.

    • @rolandfrerichs5625
      @rolandfrerichs5625 3 года назад

      Absolutely hate that system. Very invasive of my privacy. Will never let them into my house again.

    • @steffanaarts-greven1352
      @steffanaarts-greven1352 2 года назад +1

      Blissful is not the right word. Maybe for some but for most people those first weeks are the most stressful ever. Mom having full on hormone swings, crying baby you are getting used to, dad having a meltdown. No, that pink cloud needs to get out of our collective minds as that is not the case for 90% of new parents and only adds to the stress of that period.

    • @rolandfrerichs5625
      @rolandfrerichs5625 2 года назад

      @@steffanaarts-greven1352 True, but for me kraamzorg made it more stressful, not less.

  • @bubble3771
    @bubble3771 3 года назад +82

    Wacht wat??
    Kraamzorg is not a normal thing!?
    Wow
    Wut
    Okay
    That sucks for peeps in other countries lol

    • @mlenting1391
      @mlenting1391 3 года назад +1

      I think other countries must look in to our way of living with kraamzorg and more it makes live muts more fun and easier for everyone.
      And nobody is stressed out for the Bill .
      So be like us go Dutch 🇳🇱🇳🇱👍🏻👍🏻🇳🇱🇳🇱💋💋❤️💋💋

    • @123loeser
      @123loeser 3 года назад

      Yeah crazy right. Never thought we were so different on the simple ideas.

  • @allws9683
    @allws9683 3 года назад +26

    In Sweden , the both parents have 480 days (!) of parental leave , with a required minimum of 3 months for the father, while keeping 80% of their salary for maximum a year... That is a lot more than in NL with until recently 3 days for the father and a total 3 months for the mother.. As my cousin who lives in Swe mentioned; We pay a lot of taxes but get a lot of return too..

    • @tobiaskoning7878
      @tobiaskoning7878 3 года назад +1

      Pretty sure Sweden and Norway are better or even in most things we di in NL. Dont think anyone would argue that. I had 5 days paternity leave with 3 days of those unpaid.

    • @dpaans2608
      @dpaans2608 3 года назад

      @@tobiaskoning7878 yeah I also think the Scandinavian countries are some steps ahead of us

    • @suitknol6604
      @suitknol6604 3 года назад +1

      Yeah, there's a lot of things that can be improved. But then again, men now get 6? Weeks of paternity leave. And, 480 days of paternity leave is beyond reasonable. Employers suffer from that, and parents really don't need that much time with their kids, however nice it may be...

    • @Leispada
      @Leispada 3 года назад +1

      @@suitknol6604 That can be debated, to be honest. edit: i mean the impact on kids. I agree that it makes an employer suffer

    • @Ctrl_Del_0
      @Ctrl_Del_0 3 года назад +1

      With every decision a government makes there is an economic impact. If you want it or not. As stated hereunder, having an employee who will probabably leave the company for more than a year may affect the way companies hire personnel. I am not Swedish, I don' t know the system, perhaps there are ways to compensate the costs, however, it must all come from some place. And eventually it comes from the people. So eventually it also hurts the people. Pure economics.
      I am not saying that economics is everything but I do say there should be a balance. If that balance exists..... Perfect, I keep quiet. So please inform me / us.

  • @michelfug
    @michelfug 3 года назад +23

    The Dutch ambitions for the Paris Agreement are fine. Actual policy changes are often limited and in practice left for 'the next government' and thus delayed. Still better than nothing I guess, but it is something to be a bit critical about.

    • @shrike6259
      @shrike6259 3 года назад +2

      No paris agreements are bad. it's all you pay and no gain. mean while obama and EU gave china and india a go ahead they are building new coal plants by the week. but it okay we have to pay for them cos they are 3rd world .. right.. get it. we pay for them. they can build as many as they want for the next 35 years. Then it will be up for review by the EU if we still agreee .! LMAO...

    • @atticusosullivan9332
      @atticusosullivan9332 3 года назад +1

      Very good point Michel

    • @harrybruijs2614
      @harrybruijs2614 3 года назад

      @@shrike6259 when you don’t valuate economically in money a good environment and climate it will always be a cost in stead of a asset. The principle of the polluter pays should be rigourisly aplied, also on imports. Then it will become an asset to produce clean and efficient.
      Of course if this generation do nothing out of egoism and greed the costs will roll on to the next generation and they will pay.

  • @juloedtb1420
    @juloedtb1420 3 года назад +42

    I just love your dutch pronunciation. Your's is even better than some dutch native speakers and you can be proud of it. Can't wait until your next video. 🇳🇱❤🇦🇺

    • @bobosims1848
      @bobosims1848 3 года назад +4

      I so agree! Many native English speakers seem to find the Dutch language neigh impossible to pronounce even remotely properly, but you ace it like you were born here, Casey. Absolutely magnificent! Je doet het echt geweldig. Grote Klasse.

    • @gert-janvanderlee5307
      @gert-janvanderlee5307 3 года назад

      The reason she does a better job is probably because she didn't grow up here, in an area with a dialect.

    • @juloedtb1420
      @juloedtb1420 3 года назад +1

      Can you say 888 as in achthonderdenachtentachtig?, this is a test if you are truly perfect in dutch.

    • @juloedtb1420
      @juloedtb1420 3 года назад +1

      @@gert-janvanderlee5307 Er zijn hier in nederland ook mensen die abn kunnen spreken, ongeacht uit welke regio ze komen. Het heeft meer te maken met je opvoeding en het onderwijs dat je hebt genoten. Zij heeft een goede leraar gehad en is gewoon erg goed met de nederlandse taal.

    • @bobosims1848
      @bobosims1848 3 года назад +2

      @@juloedtb1420 mbt 888: Als men fatsoenlijk kan zeggen dat men in Duivendrecht, Eindhoven, IJmuiden of Scheveningen woont, dan geloof ik het ook wel, hoor. Dan is hun Nederlands zeker niet beroerd. :)
      Oh, en tussen haakjes, mijn ABN is niet slecht... Geboren Haarlemmer, dus dan weet je het wel. :)

  • @mkgriffioen
    @mkgriffioen 3 года назад +21

    Hi Casey,
    I always enjoy watching your videos. You always appear well-informed. And as a Dutchman, the love for our little country is nice to see.
    As a Dutchman, I think our country is certainly not perfect, and much is not going well. But when I see it through the eyes of an "outsider" we cannot complain compared to many places in the world.

  • @reviewerdiogeones5857
    @reviewerdiogeones5857 3 года назад +32

    I'd wish the Netherlands would really gear up the initiative to recycle. We have so much complete redundant packaging materials here! Using less packaging would mean less recycling, which is a good thing. Furthermore, I'm an avid supporter of extending statiegeld to many other items such as cigarette boxes, fastfood items, just about anything that is now carelessly thrown away. Last but not least, raise the amount of statiegeld to meaningful fees to ensure all is recycled.

    • @caseykilmore
      @caseykilmore  3 года назад +4

      When you order a book from bol and it comes in something the size of a large shoe box! I hate this!!! and plastic wrapping for things that aren't breakable! I'm a massive yes to extending statiegeld to other items I think it would be a great way to turn around some items that are carelessly thrown away. One o the big reasons we don't get takeaway is because of all the waste that comes with it.

    • @nicoledijkstra7168
      @nicoledijkstra7168 3 года назад +2

      I know the Netherlands is bad but much better than majority of the countries because most don't recycle and send it to landfill. I know like only a few countries in Europe do better. We as the entire world should do better with recycling and using less plastic

    • @joostvanlinge263
      @joostvanlinge263 3 года назад +4

      There is much to be desired about Dutch systems and policies, but, as we say: 'In the land of the blind, one- eye is king.'

    • @korenn9381
      @korenn9381 3 года назад

      Here in Hengelo there's been a big push by the municipality to increase trash separation. It's more expensive to throw away non-separated trash and more things can be thrown into the packaging container.
      It sounds great on paper. But in practice everything gets burned anyway because it's too expensive and time consuming to separate at the waste management plant. Which topples the whole system -_-

    • @SwirlingSoul
      @SwirlingSoul 3 года назад

      @@nicoledijkstra7168 The Ocean Cleanup is giving it a good go. Boyan Slat is a Dutch guy too. That counts me thinkz ;-)

  • @qwertyuiopzxcfgh
    @qwertyuiopzxcfgh 3 года назад +3

    From my experience, the Netherlands is the absolute world leader when it comes to agricultural technology. In greenhouses, plants can now be tested and treated for pests and diseases on an individual level. This does not only increase crop yield, but it also helps protect against pesticide immunity, making a big step towards long term sustainability.
    Combine that with the incredible level of water management: one kilogram of Dutch tomatoes only requires four litres of water, compared to hundreds of litres when growing them the traditional way.
    I firmly believe these developments will permanently end world hunger if implemented globally.

  • @meeuwtje
    @meeuwtje 3 года назад +5

    The Dutch University for Agriculture & Fruits and the University for Water management are known as one of the best in the world.

  • @j.l.boekestein3201
    @j.l.boekestein3201 3 года назад +28

    Well our weather system is pretty bad :D

    • @papriikaNL
      @papriikaNL 3 года назад

      ❤️❤️

    • @liavd2602
      @liavd2602 3 года назад

      But atleast it's free :D

    • @Rob-yj9ew
      @Rob-yj9ew 3 года назад

      our weathersystem is good it gives us the wealth we have. We need the rain and it is changing due to climat change. People always complain that it rains a lot, but it actaully is not.

  • @Lillith.
    @Lillith. 3 года назад +9

    Hey, a list I think the Netherlands does well, but could be improved.
    The recycling bit especially. We do recycling well, but it's reduce, reuse, recycle. It's good we are experts at point 3, but let's focus on point 1 a bit more.

    • @atticusosullivan9332
      @atticusosullivan9332 3 года назад +3

      Completley agree. It's the endless production of waste that's the problem

    • @MartijnPennings
      @MartijnPennings 3 года назад +2

      Totally agree. I think the reason we're so good at recycling is simply: we produce soooo much trash, so we have to do something with it or we're going to drown in trash!! But I get it, it's just so much easier to buy something with plastic packaging than without. Trash is too cheap.

    • @LaPingvino
      @LaPingvino 3 года назад +1

      true, but I'm in the US here at the moment and shopping uses so many plastic bags here for example -- just Dutch biking and the effort to reduce platic bags can only make a huge difference in comparison.

  • @marceljanssens5935
    @marceljanssens5935 3 года назад +8

    Anither thing: in the 90s when I had my kids the parental leave was like one hour really. So good this has changed so much for the better.

    • @TD-er
      @TD-er 3 года назад +1

      7 years ago, when my daughter was born, I had to show pages from the "wetboek" to get my 2 days as they would deduct it from my own free days.
      So the amount of time mentioned in the video is already a huge improvement over what it was only a few years ago.

    • @samknetsch
      @samknetsch 3 года назад

      I'm born late 80's but my dad was home for 5 days, but I think it have so something to do with the job he have.

  • @marceljanssens5935
    @marceljanssens5935 3 года назад +6

    Yeah we ducthies like complaining a lot but I totally agree with you: we are very good off on many fronts. Regarding recycling: I once learned that the seperate collection of glass, paper and plastic waste actually is MORE expensive than seperating it at a central plant. But it's kept in place for public awareness.

    • @stefangrobbink7760
      @stefangrobbink7760 3 года назад +1

      We got where we are by complaining a lot, and will probably not stop doing so anytime soon.

  • @joop558
    @joop558 3 года назад +6

    Even when you buy a tv, a dishwasher, a washingmachine etc you have to pay some kind of statiegeld, but this is not money you get back but that is used to disassemble the electronic devices to use the materials again.

    • @bobosims1848
      @bobosims1848 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, this is actually more a part of our recycling initiative. With every NEW electrical/electronic device that you buy, the price includes a mandatory fee for its future recycling. And if you buy 'witgoed' (household appliances like washing machines et cetera) online, the salesman often even offers to have the old appliance removed by whoever delivers your new one. At no extra charge! Part of the service. And most electronic stores even have a 'recycling bin' where you can drop off any small devices you discard, broken or otherwise. They also take dead batteries, old 'lightbulbs' et cetera...
      It's so intuitive, nobody even thinks about it anymore. I even forgot what that mandatory fee is called again...

    • @gert-janvanderlee5307
      @gert-janvanderlee5307 3 года назад

      That's not statiegeld, that is the verwijderingsbijdrage (removal contribution?). Where you pay a small amount for the recycling of electronic appliances and the store you buy your new appliances has to take the old one back and make sure it goes to the right recycling service.

    • @Caelo1
      @Caelo1 3 года назад +1

      @@bobosims1848 FYI when they deliver a new household appliance to replace an old one they are obligated to take the old one for recycling, for free. There is no choice, so the salesman offering is just smart marketing on his part :-)

  • @GeorgeSaint666
    @GeorgeSaint666 3 года назад +8

    I'd simply translate "kraamzorg" literally as "cribcare"... as that is exactly what it is: "that care for a baby that is still in its crib."

  • @gireaffe3457
    @gireaffe3457 3 года назад +5

    7:40 about that when you are in google maps or earth and you zoom in on south holland you see alot off white/glass building from above most off those are greenhouses

  • @henkwilts7533
    @henkwilts7533 3 года назад +2

    I think that a lot things you praise us for, can also be found in other countries. The way of separating garbage and recycling is even more extensive in countries like Germany and Austria.
    Paternityleave was common in the scandinavian countries before the Netherlands. Kraamzorg is available in Belgium as well.

  • @classesanytime
    @classesanytime 3 года назад +3

    Maternity leave in the Netherlands is 6 weeks before birth until 10 weeks after birth, so a total of 16 weeks. When you give birth to twins or triplets it's at minimum 20 weeks counted 4 weeks before birth.
    Paternity leave is the first 4 paid weeks after birth !!
    Pré-natal care is the first 8 days after birth.

    • @classesanytime
      @classesanytime 3 года назад

      business.gov.nl/regulation/leave-schemes/

  • @nicoledijkstra7168
    @nicoledijkstra7168 3 года назад +4

    I know that for the healthare sistem in the Netherlands they say to take some paracetamol if you only have like a cold or other minor diseases which is better for our body than building up resistance for antibiotics which will be prescribed in some countries

    • @nicoledijkstra7168
      @nicoledijkstra7168 3 года назад

      @Abel Abel using certain antibiotics on animals when they are not ill or even ill is illegal and can cause a farmer to get a fine in the Netherlands. The antibiotics use on animals are very regulated here

    • @nicoledijkstra7168
      @nicoledijkstra7168 3 года назад

      @Abel Abel Well the fact humans in some countries get more antibiotics in their lifetime than most cows here is a fact. We as humans can use much more diverse antibiotics than farm animals in the Netherlands. And while most cows here get only antibiotics when they are really sick and a lot of diseases animals can have are not found in humans and vice versa. So if your meat is very regulated or you are vegan/vegetarian than overprescription of antibiotics is a problem. I saw that first hand as my sister was very ill as a kid and was like 2 years on antibiotics so yeah that will make us resistant to it. Not one farm animal getting once antibiotics and then none again. Constant use of antibiotics make us resistance and not all farm animals from every country. (Yes I agree some countries do let some type of animals be on antibiotics constantly so do your research on where your meat is coming from)

  • @vincinoyb9734
    @vincinoyb9734 3 года назад +2

    You really make me feel more proud of things I took for granted in my own country.

  • @bararobberbaron859
    @bararobberbaron859 3 года назад +1

    I think a large part of why the health insurance system is so good is because of 'managed competition'. There is a minimum by law that every healthcare provider must offer in their package, this very much limits small print and surprise bills. Some offer more, some less. But I hear healthcare subsidy is like €104 towards a €119 bill? And people that can't work or are long term unemployed can go to the local government and get added to a collective plan, that takes care of the copay. It truly is a good system, because a healthy population can get a lot more done. If people aren't prohibited financially from getting/staying healthy, that takes you most of the way there.

  • @juliandeleeuw3817
    @juliandeleeuw3817 3 года назад +47

    Not even talking about water management, shame on you ;-)

    • @Joey-ct8bm
      @Joey-ct8bm 3 года назад +1

      Maybe they have great water management in Australia. It's surrounded by water.

    • @pim1234
      @pim1234 3 года назад +4

      @@Joey-ct8bm nope, I work at a Dutch watermanagement company. We have engineers at Australia permanently stationed

    • @PoiColle
      @PoiColle 3 года назад

      @@Joey-ct8bm news flash. every island has water around it. besides that water management is only of high importance when ur country is as low or lower than sealevel or has tons of earthquakes, tsunamis and other disasters that cause big waves and stress on the land, like bangladesh, florida, netherlands, etc.

    • @Rob-yj9ew
      @Rob-yj9ew 3 года назад

      nope, we are 5 weeks further into 2021 and Australia has shown the world they have not a good watermanagement system and during their yearly fires they show the same......

    • @Rob-yj9ew
      @Rob-yj9ew 3 года назад

      Paris climate agreement.... we are not even doing that well, compared with a few other European countries, due to the last gouvernements we had. Another problem is that we produce about 80% of the meat for exporting, but the "shit" stays here so also the polution. We should export 1 kg of NOx/Amonia/CO2 with every kg of meat! They have the cheap meat and we have the polution. This should be compesated by the other EU countries.

  • @milenacukic
    @milenacukic 3 года назад +2

    Kraamzorg also exists in Serbia. The period of maternal leave is one year. I do not have such a beautiful experience with the Dutch healthcare system, since I had to travel every time when I had a major health issue, despite paying the health insurance. It may be that they are superb in child care and emergency, but in some other areas are far from being the best.

  • @janmaghiun2163
    @janmaghiun2163 3 года назад +1

    Paternity leave and maternity leave in Romania are 2 years. And you get from the government 80% of your last salary for two years.

  • @jannetteberends8730
    @jannetteberends8730 3 года назад +8

    About the Paris agreement, I think that almost everybody in the Netherlands knows the climate is changing. Especially older people. We know how winters used to be. Not to be able to skate on the pond in the neighborhood in the winter used to be an exception. Now it’s the other way around.

    • @elonanuruw684
      @elonanuruw684 3 года назад +2

      As a 25 yo in the Netherlands even I could skate on ice when I was about 7 and even after for a few years - and I think that de Elfstedentocht getting cancelled a few times now (I think?) really shows all generations

    • @sandercornelissen5809
      @sandercornelissen5809 3 года назад +2

      Climate is always changing...... Paris agreement is not going to change that. Brainwashed people "know" the climate is changing because that's the BS they've been fed for years. Ice age will come again.
      Isn't it funny how it was called global warming, and now it's called climate change. Wake up people! Climate is always changing. It's a nice way to direct your money towards goals that are under control of the people that benefit from fighting that invisible climate change monster.

    • @veragodijn6537
      @veragodijn6537 3 года назад

      @@sandercornelissen5809 Even if what you say is true, will it not be still the case that we should care more about nature and the earth? That we should stop cutting all the forests and kill or use many so many animals... or animals at all? These are two different things, but people tend to think they are not responsible for their environment if they cannot do anything about climate change. And that, I think, is a mistake.

    • @sandercornelissen5809
      @sandercornelissen5809 3 года назад

      @@veragodijn6537 SO much to unpack here, which is just too much for here, but maybe just start with a little bit of nuance. Not so black and white. If you cannot do anything about climate change, does not mean you can't care for- and about the environment you live in. People can still be held accountable for pollution (unless you're a civil servant apparently) see pikmeer arrest for instance. Anyway, I'm sure you mean well, I just have a problem with your reasoning here.

    • @veragodijn6537
      @veragodijn6537 3 года назад

      @@sandercornelissen5809 That is what I meant and my comment was not a personal remark to you but more in a general sense. So indeed, more black and white.
      It just seems, from my experience, people who deny the current climate change that has a lot to do with human interference, tend to pull away from all responsibility. I’m glad you are not one of them.

  • @HairyGhostbear
    @HairyGhostbear 3 года назад +3

    7:43 The reason why the Netherlands is the second largest exporter of fruits and vegetables is mainly because of Schiphol Airport and the Rotterdam harbour. We import LOADS of stuff and export them to the rest of Europe again. This is not clear from those statistics. It is not all grown here, that would be ridiculous for such a small country.

    • @renekuipers4563
      @renekuipers4563 3 года назад

      Totaal wrong.story.

    • @DoedelStuff
      @DoedelStuff 3 года назад

      Haha that would be kinda funny, the Netherlands would just be one big greenhouse😂

    • @renekuipers4563
      @renekuipers4563 3 года назад

      Export is export ..oke you make a product an need 3 products...but also other countrys do it..univerciy Wageningen.Food valey.. The production numbers are so much ..Ned feed the world..hytec .

  • @TimBlokdijk1983
    @TimBlokdijk1983 3 года назад +1

    The Dutch bicycle network, and protected intersections. In 2019 I was in Australia for the World Solar Challenge and I saw in the local news that Australia was getting it's first "Dutch style" protected bicycle intersection. And speaking of the World Solar Challenge, the Dutch Lightyear company is busy designing the first production solar cars, it's from the students behind Solar Team Eindhoven who won the "cruiser" class four times.

    • @samknetsch
      @samknetsch 3 года назад

      Netherland wins every years the Solar Challenge, as we have 3 team in it 😁

  • @codex4046
    @codex4046 3 года назад +1

    Something you didn't (clearly) mention: Kraamzorg is besides a nurse also just a help around the house. They will prepare a lunch (very nice ones if you get the products in house), they will also do some basic cleaning tasks the mother can't really do because of the recovery and it allows the father to be with the child and rest as well.
    This might depend on the kraamzorg person though, I know my sister had really nice fruit salads and dinners because the kraamzorg person really liked to cook.

    • @OP-1000
      @OP-1000 3 года назад

      I also cook nice fruit salads...

    • @michielotsen6317
      @michielotsen6317 3 года назад

      And beschuit met muisjes!!

  • @korenn9381
    @korenn9381 3 года назад +8

    I would translate "Kraamzorg" as "Maternity care", similar to how the hospital has a "maternity ward"

    • @MrCalls1
      @MrCalls1 3 года назад

      In the uk I’m pretty sure it’s just a standard midwife who visits after birth. If definitely happens, I’m just not sure if the name is midwife or another rename, and I believe the area is called post-natal care. I actually didn’t realise it wasn’t standard

    • @korenn9381
      @korenn9381 3 года назад

      @@MrCalls1 Midwives are also involved, but that's not the maternity care. A midwife is involved during pregnancy, during labour itself, and for some health checkups afterwards (unless it's a case with special requirements, then it's a doctor who does all that).
      The maternity care is a nurse who helps you out 8 hours a day for the first 5 days after labour, to help out with getting the baby settled in. They teach you how to change the baby, how to tuck it in, how to safely use a thermal jar around a baby, etc etc etc. And make sure the mother gets the rest she needs. Depending on how well things go they can stay on a bit longer, or stop earlier. And the mother can always say she doesn't want the help.

    • @MrCalls1
      @MrCalls1 3 года назад

      @@korenn9381 I see. So in addition to midwives, there’s an extra role.
      A post-maternity-carer is basically a nanny+ and mother trainer, for the first 5days, post birth ?

    • @korenn9381
      @korenn9381 3 года назад

      @@MrCalls1 Yep. But it's a trained nurse so she (or he) can also help with any medical stuff that comes up.

  • @steffanaarts-greven1352
    @steffanaarts-greven1352 2 года назад

    The nurse that provides "kraamzorg" is called a maternity nurse in English.

  • @SwirlingSoul
    @SwirlingSoul 3 года назад

    The recycling is actually getting to me a little. What is allowed in the plastic bin (orange bin) is not as straightforward as you might think... and indeed, batteries(supermarket or chem take-in) glass (glassbin/supermarket), paper/cardboard (set at street in cardboard box at x date), fabrics (fabric containers mid block), kitchen/garden in the green bin and what's left goes in the grey one.
    It can be a bit much. But you HAVE to recycle, because if you don't the grey one will be full within a week, and they only empty it once every three weeks here in Emmen.
    So, I love how well we do with recycling, but the costs are immense, (which is why they now reduce the pickup frequency) and one can get quite annoyed at having to separate the teabag, it's staple, and paper and string. Not everybody does it of course.
    I like how positive you are about our country. I think you might be interested in jovie's channel. Jovie's Home it's called. And she's a croatian/american/dutch lady. who also loves it here. She also described our taxes system. To just log in online, have it be pre-filled out, and all you have to do is check, and press send. ; )
    I was always rather grumpy about my own country, until I realized just how good we have it here. It's overly organized, but you have to, when space is not that much. And, I love that there are sidewalks everywhere. (except maybe in tight spots in Amsterdam, lol)
    You should definitely visit the rest of the country too, if you want different feels. That is one thing I AM happy with here, we have SO many different TYPES of land (sand, clay, peat, rivers, forest, farmland, delta, dunes, heather, swamp, city, rural, sea, etc..., just within our tiny country. Except mountains, those we don't have. A tiny hill is all. ;-)) Oh, but we DO have some caves. 😜

  • @charlotteconnandevries9460
    @charlotteconnandevries9460 3 года назад +3

    We have a similar system to kraamzog in France. A midwife will come to your house a few days after you are back from hospital, and you can ask her to come back several times. I haven't given birth yet but that is what I understood :) I have a 30€/month "mutuelle" (what you can pay on top of compulsory healthcare participation taken from what you earn) and will not have to pay a single cent for anything. Paternity leave will increase to 28 days in July, used to be 14. And of course our healthcare system is great, though it is increasingly underfunded. Frenchies, défendons la sécu !

    • @RTomassi
      @RTomassi 3 года назад

      This was exactly the comment I was looking for. I knew this is more common in (at least, but probably other places) in Europe. I know the English have a similar thing as well.

  • @veragodijn6537
    @veragodijn6537 3 года назад +2

    Imagine: if the Netherlands is that good on so many subjects, and I as a Dutchman find it not nearly enough, we could do SO much better (especially on the environment), how stunningly bad are other countries doing??
    That makes me sad, but even more happy that I am so fortunate to live in this country.

    • @sachadee.6104
      @sachadee.6104 3 года назад +1

      @L M other countries ARE stunningly bad on the environment. Especially USA and Canada (those I know of). groetjes uit New Brunswick Canada. We only started to separate SOME garbage last year in our province. It may differ from province to province.

  • @peet4921
    @peet4921 3 года назад

    You forgot to mention that for anything slightly serious our healthcare system presents you a waiting list a mile long, when for the same treatment/operation you can get immediate care in all of the surrounding countries.

  • @TLuijpen
    @TLuijpen 3 года назад +6

    13:40 "things that are super well done here in the Netherlands...., hehehe. You're already back!!! LOL.

  • @SojournersPerspective
    @SojournersPerspective 3 года назад

    I was surprised last time a big online retailer asked me if they could take electrical waste with them as they delivered something new. Now a variation of this has been around for awhile. Buy a fridge we take the old one. But this was a give us whatever you got approach which goes a step further.

  • @isistendam1984
    @isistendam1984 3 года назад +1

    I love your style of editing!❤️😊

  • @miatx6818
    @miatx6818 3 года назад

    Btw at Albert Heijn aka AH, one of the biggest supermarket chains in Netherlands has a system when if ya collect money stamps at every €10 of grocery’s. Then ya get a stamp for every euro you’ve spend (it must be above €10 otherwise ya won’t get it).
    If ya collect a whole full book with 490 stamps ya get €52 back

    • @henkwilts7533
      @henkwilts7533 3 года назад

      More supermarket chains are doing the same thing.

  • @ceryseira
    @ceryseira 3 года назад +1

    Being the second largest exporter may sound good on paper, but it boils down to producing an insanely excessive amount of produce which is largely not consumed here. Meaning huge emissions and a lot of our small country being used to this end, which is problematic when it comes to living space. Same goes for the number of cattle raised and the subsidies received for this. It certainly is impressive in a way, but I wouldn't deem it 'good'.

    • @jiriwichern
      @jiriwichern 3 года назад

      That depends... If we (I'm Dutch) can do it more economically and with less waste produced despite transportation costs, it's a net win for the world and nice to have 'our economy' profit from. If that's not the case, I agree with you and produce should rather be produced locally. But there is a reason certain countries are good at certain things and before you outright condemn every type of globalism, first look at what harm your actions may cause. For example, China is producing vast quantities of (consumer) goods, and many environmentally conscious people absolutely abhore 'the consumerism' because of it, citing wasteful transportation, horrible environmental impact in China itself... all true. But, would it actually be cleaner and more efficient if we would manufacture all those different goods ourselves, in our own (sometimes puny and wholly inefficient because of economies of scale in small nations) factories? That should be asked first. And if the answer is 'no', for the love of all that's holy, let China keep doing their thing. And maybe try to mediate the environmental impact over there. In other words, either globally or locally produced goods CAN be very wasteful, and they also COULD very well be not. You don't know until you weighed all advantages and disadvantages. Do not focus on just one aspect of it and make sure you're damned right and damend honest when you do claim one or the other is better.
      Whether it's the one or the other depends on all kinds of both obvious and hidden costs, like clean water squandered (technological solutions for much of that), greenhouse gasses emitted (CO2, methane, etc.) without compensation, energy from dirty sources being used without proper filtering and/or compensation, labour needed to get the job done (it may sound crazy, but by using manual labour, you need to actually have a work force do the job and they have all kinds of hidden costs to the environment compared to simply automate them away... if humans are the largest polluters on the planet, human labour probably is the dirtiest solution to get things done). And all those costs are also dependent on each other, many can be offset with the proper use of various technological innovations (which the Netherlands has for a very long time been very successful in... our globally most known university is an agricultural one, Wageningen) and vary from region to region.

  • @eddejong4792
    @eddejong4792 3 года назад +1

    the big question is : is it 2400 baud or 9600 ? .. ill go for 2400 baud....

  • @sanderspeetjens
    @sanderspeetjens 3 года назад

    I's also a thing in Belgium, but you have to request it and it's up to a maximum of 3 months after the birth

  • @helgabruynooghe4306
    @helgabruynooghe4306 3 года назад

    a major thing is mobility: bicycles (bicycle lanes) and public transportation. Quite unique in the world

  • @CobisTaba
    @CobisTaba 3 года назад +1

    About health care, I know in the US you readily get medicines like antibiotics. It's because people pay a lot and expect something in return, plus the doctors get more income too right? This is NOT a good thing... it generally gives you medicine you do not need. It's costly and is horrible in terms of resistances against for antibiotics..
    So yeah, I prefer the Dutch doctors who sent you home for rest, if it's not needed to give you something :)

  • @nuuwnhuus
    @nuuwnhuus 3 года назад

    Alongside both healthcare and farming, the way we use or rather avoid antibiotics is also noteworthy. It's not something that most Dutch people realize is different, yet for some reason it is ingrained in them.

  • @apexpower22
    @apexpower22 3 года назад

    we do have alot of agriculture (60% of the land is) but the only reason we are the biggest exporter is because of schiphol and rotterdam harbor not all of the food we export is produced here

  • @TLuijpen
    @TLuijpen 3 года назад

    Since a year or two we also officially recycle plastics now and i must say that i was completely blown away by the
    huge amount of it there was going to waste in daily packaging. It is threefold the amount of others like paper. Seeing this really made me realize the global problem concerning plastics ending up in nature.....

    • @gert-janvanderlee5307
      @gert-janvanderlee5307 3 года назад +1

      Not sure where you live but we've been recycling plastic for a lot longer than two years. More like ten years. Allthough I don't remember exactly when it started.

  • @Terrorrai1
    @Terrorrai1 3 года назад

    If you find kraamzorg surprising, you should look up the verloskundigen (midwife?)system. Half the births happen inside the own home with no adverse effects on health of mother and baby and reduced stress levels during birth.

  • @blafhoest
    @blafhoest 3 года назад

    I like your translation for kraamzorg but I do think it is a little off. I would go with 'after birth care' for kraamzorg because 'after birth nurse' would be the kraamhulp who provides kraamzorg. I don't mean to nitpick by any means, I used to be a translator and old habits die hard.
    For what it's worth, when I still did translation work 'maternity care' or 'maternity home care' were the preferred translations for information packages.

  • @koeielul112
    @koeielul112 Месяц назад

    6 weeks paternity leave is nothing. In Sweden I guess they get a year and a half or so

  • @annakinskywalker5347
    @annakinskywalker5347 3 года назад +1

    U bent blijkbaar een fan van Nederland , met de beste sociale zekerheid het enige land waar men Nederlands praat ,vergeet Vlaanderen niet daar spreekt men ook Nederlands en is de sociale zekerheid nog een stuk beter ( daar is geen wachtlijst voor chirurgische ingrepen , waarom denk je dat veel Nederlanders zich laten behandelen in Belgie en dat er zo veel Nederlandse studenten aan onze faculteiten studeren ? ) en wat de landbouw betreft ja ze kweken paprika's -tomaten en andere groenten en bloemen in grote glazen kasten ( serres van hectaren groot ) waar ze tonnen co2 in pompen en tonnen stookolie gebruiken voor verwarming ,begrijp me niet verkeerd Holland is een fijn land om er te zijn , maar om het nu het topland van Europa te noemen vond ik wat ver gaan , de andere buurlanden zijn geen onderontwikkelde derde wereld landen , en dat u een fijne ervaring had in Nederland mooi .

  • @teaser6089
    @teaser6089 3 года назад

    Just wanna add that as a Dutch person the Dutch Government is failing very hard in reaching the climate goal.
    Oh yes, we are planning to reach those goals, but the government isn't pushing hard enough. And subsidising 3 billion in renewables whilst also subsidising 3 billion for fossil fuels basically cancels the benefits out.
    It's not that we don't want or can't change quickly, it's just the government not accepting the fact we have to move now and can't push it forward another 4 years and let another cabinet deal with it.

  • @eleo_b
    @eleo_b 3 года назад

    My mother absolutely hated kraamzorg. She hated having a stranger in her home running household.

    • @joostvanlinge263
      @joostvanlinge263 3 года назад

      My sister used to clean her house before the cleaning lady came: she didn't want to give the impression that she was a bad housewife...
      Kraamzorg is not only about caring for the baby and stuff; the kraamzorg nurses will make coffee and cut cake for the guests who come to congratulate. Therefor, it is polite to either visit within a few days when the nurse is still there, or wait until the new mother has recuperated.

  • @msdenise1234567
    @msdenise1234567 3 года назад

    Zorg is hier ook gericht op kwaliteit van leven. Waar zo'n beetje de hele wereld je zo lang mogelijk in leven wilt houden, is onze zorg gericht op hoe goed je leven nog gaat zijn. Ben je stervende? Dan krijg je hulp om nog veel van je naasten te genieten, het liefst thuis, in plaats van lang in het ziekenhuis te liggen tot je sterft (palliatieve zorg). Een belangrijk onderwerp is daarom ook euthanasie - en tijdens de verkiezingen dit jaar de ontwikkeling van de wet ontremd hulp bij zelfdoding.

  • @vnesje1981
    @vnesje1981 3 года назад +9

    Please don’t forget that the whole government resigned over the childcare allowance (subsidies) scandal!

    • @papriikaNL
      @papriikaNL 3 года назад +2

      Thats true, but it's not like the whole government is corrupt

    • @vnesje1981
      @vnesje1981 3 года назад

      @@papriikaNL nobody! Said that! She is talking about how great Dutch systems are and I am pointing out how the system has failed for thousands of families.

    • @joostvanlinge263
      @joostvanlinge263 3 года назад

      @@vnesje1981 You are right, and 'the system', from parliament down to the tax collectors, has failed miserably. Yet all these RUclips videos praising the Dutch ways center on the same thing: the idea of a society that accepts solidarity as a basis, contrary to the countries that panick at the mere word 'socialism'.

  • @vanomso
    @vanomso 3 года назад

    Very nice video!
    Another good system in The Netherlands is: the infrastructure!
    And... : De Wegenwacht
    A kind of insurance in cace your car breaks down on the road. They have over 4 million members and ar the best in Europe...

  • @ErikS-
    @ErikS- 3 года назад

    There is actually only one real thing that we in The Netherlands are unique...
    We have ASML.
    The most advanced product humanity has ever built.

  • @robertwemmers8562
    @robertwemmers8562 3 года назад

    Check out the paternity leave in Canada i think it is a little bit longer than in the Netherlands( months longer)

  • @jpdj2715
    @jpdj2715 3 года назад

    2nd largest fruits & vegetables - doubt it. 2nd largest agricultural exporter, yes. The distance behind the US is not even big.
    An Irish expat living in the NL once told me, if the Dutch had lived in Ireland, they could have fed the world, but when the Irish had lived in the NL, they'd all drown.
    The basis is a notion of collaboration and synergies of variants thereof. Look at Texas in a spell of frost. There is no notion of collective - in God we trust says the dollar, and that means we don't trust each other? Well, deregulation of their energy "market" made it $28 billion more expensive to the collective. And now it took a bunch of lives too.

  • @ColoredWoman
    @ColoredWoman 3 года назад +2

    Casey, what do you think about the lenght of maternity leave? For me it was unplrasant surprise that is so short. Right now i am after maternity leave, and still I didn't recover. Also i think that 3 months old baby is too small to stay away from mother for so many hours. But i have to adjust myslef to it

    • @caseykilmore
      @caseykilmore  3 года назад

      The maternity leave is not long enough in my opinion. In australia you can take up to 12 months but not the entire time is paid I think the first 6 months is paid or you can opt to have half pay for the whole year. This changes from pace to place but you only get it if you've been with the company for over 12 months. I had been working my job for 8 weeks when I fell pregnant and was still entitled to have paid time off and the time off while I was sick was also covered. If I had of been in that situation I have no doubts that I would have lost my job and not had any maternity leave because I hadn't been working for them long enough. but you are right 3 months is still too young. before we left I had anxiety about leaving our daughter in care at such a young age so getting stuck in Aus with a bunch of fam around for support was 100% an upside to what happened in 2020 for us.

  • @robertwemmers8562
    @robertwemmers8562 3 года назад

    They called here in Canada for bottles, and plastic containers deposit or return money.

  • @RetroBudje
    @RetroBudje 2 года назад

    Your Dutch is soo good

  • @CeliaGercovich
    @CeliaGercovich 3 года назад

    Such a good video Case!

  • @elonanuruw684
    @elonanuruw684 3 года назад

    maybe you can use the cans for crafts or something,, or see if local artists use them for art pieces

  • @theburnix
    @theburnix 3 года назад

    Great video.
    Although i dont completely agree on the fact that we dutchies are front runners when it comes to the paris agreement.
    Yes we're on our way to lower the carbon excretion levels on paper. While in practice its more like we burn imported biomass instead of gas and coal. Which is arguably equally taxing to the klimate. All the other points are a great insight in what we need to look out for that we dont let the government budget out the things that we excel at.

  • @creativedutchess4866
    @creativedutchess4866 3 года назад

    The great systems also cause the taxes to be very high in the Netherlands. But I think it is worth it!

  • @suzanneoortwijn3928
    @suzanneoortwijn3928 3 года назад +10

    The Dutch people are so complaining about the health care system😂we are paying more and less is being coverred

    • @stefangrobbink7760
      @stefangrobbink7760 3 года назад +2

      We do have an aging population that require more care, so that is kind of forseeable

    • @joeribaars5481
      @joeribaars5481 3 года назад +4

      @@stefangrobbink7760 then just have a national care system (nationaal zorgstelsel) that way no more eigen risico.

  • @amnonhoppe
    @amnonhoppe 3 года назад

    Regarding the Paris agreement, if the government means business they would uphold the "salderings regeling" for Solar panel owners. There is no real incentive anymore if that no longer flies and at the rate they were rolled out, they would have made a difference.

    • @shrike6259
      @shrike6259 3 года назад

      no it would not have. solar only works during the day. not to mention the really bad mining practices that have to be done to get all the cheap metals/minerals for a panel that only lives for 15 to 20 years then it becomes toxic waste in a land fill. and all the tesla batteries that go with it even a bigger problem as coal or gas induced electrical energy

  • @therealdutchidiot
    @therealdutchidiot 3 года назад +1

    "My doctor only gives me Panadol" is like "my doctor won't give me antibiotics for a virus. If you don't need anything more you don't need anything more. So, if there's no indication you need more, you won't get more, with the express request to call if if doesn't get any better in a couple of days.

  • @Sakura-zu4rz
    @Sakura-zu4rz 3 года назад

    Goede middag💖

  • @josbtje5953
    @josbtje5953 3 года назад

    I think the best translation for "kraamzorg" is "birth homecare". But I am shocked that this is just for the Dutch and German people 😳

  • @moodsource3085
    @moodsource3085 3 года назад +1

    In Belgium there is also kraamzorg and costs there less than in the Netherlands.

  • @xander9460
    @xander9460 2 месяца назад

    We like to complain so much. Then I watch these videos. And I realize that we have it SO... INSANELY.... GOOD.... IN... THE.... NETHERLANDS...
    There's of course room for improvement. But let's just start from the basis that we do have some of the absolute best living standards in the world. And then work from there.

  • @sarahroosendans935
    @sarahroosendans935 3 года назад +2

    Everything you just said applies also to Belgium. Quite logic, cuz Belgium was a relative long time ago part op the Netherlands.

    • @gert-janvanderlee5307
      @gert-janvanderlee5307 3 года назад +3

      Healthcare is even beter in België. At least that's what I heard. No experience with it myself. They could do a bit better on roads.

    • @sarahroosendans935
      @sarahroosendans935 3 года назад +2

      @@gert-janvanderlee5307 It could be better, it's very similar anyway.. and yeah, the roads is a real problem in Belgium

    • @christinadn1819
      @christinadn1819 3 года назад +1

      Sarah Roosendans Mijn tante in België betaalt hooguit €20 per maand zorgverzekering. Mijn moeder in Nederland betaalt € 165 per maand. Krijg je een pensioentje vanuit België, betaal dan ook nog even 5,75% zorgverzekering over dat inkomen. Plus ook nog € 385 eigen risico, €250 eigen bijdrage voor medicijnen. Als de familie dit hoort valt hun mond open van verbazing!!Het is in Nederland gewoon veel duurder....

    • @maneskin8097
      @maneskin8097 3 года назад

      @@christinadn1819 Van 10 zaken zijn er in Nederland 8 beter. België is vooral goed in schulden maken daar kan Nederland niet tegen op. Belgen klagen vooral over onbetaalbare energierekening. Als Nederland 10 jaar lang bezig is met de vergrijzing en dus aan het bezuinigen en dus bijvoorbeeld.extra zorgkosten berekend aan haar burgers zijn de Belgen nog 10 jaar aan het discussiëren en aan het schulden maken hetgeen de volgende generatie en straks ook het Europese noodfonds mag betalen.

    • @christinadn1819
      @christinadn1819 3 года назад

      Ronald Maneschijn Daar zijn de meningen anders wel verdeeld over. Er wordt nog altijd royaal geleefd in België door die "klagende" burgers. Kinderbijslag al eens vergeleken? De jongeren hebben het ook niet slecht daar. Moeten in de meeste gevallen geen krantenwijken gaan lopen of baantjes bij de supermarkt gaan invullen voor een belachelijk laag loon en kunnen veel langer thuis wonen( zonder kostgeld te betalen!!)Dat 8 van de 10 dingen hier in Nederland beter zouden zijn is wel heel positief ingeschat🤣🤣🤣De Nederlanders die in België gaan wonen heb ik nog nooit horen klagen of zien terugkomen!!Ongetwijfeld zullen er ook wel nadelen zijn maar "klagers" klagen overal!!!

  • @L4wyrup
    @L4wyrup 3 года назад +1

    Usually when I explain statiegeld to english speaking people I call it bottle deposit. This "translation" is imperfect as not all bottles have bottle deposit and it will become imperfect as cans will also get deposit in a few years. But it's the best I know, as I can explain that some bottles have bottle deposit, encouraging people to recoup the deposit by returning large soda bottles and almost all beer bottles to the supermarket.

    • @bararobberbaron859
      @bararobberbaron859 3 года назад

      Deposit does make sense as a term. I just don't know about the bottle part. I knew it as RIC (return incentive cost) but that seems overly complex. So I don't know, I'd probably explain it as 'you buy the drink and the container it's in. Obviously you can't return the drink once it's gone, but you can return the container and get your money back'. Or hybridize the terms and go with 'container deposit'? I know Dutch people think of the garbage can when you hear 'container' though.

    • @RealConstructor
      @RealConstructor 3 года назад

      I thought it was called return reimbursement. I thought I read that in other comments YT. But I’m not a native English speaker so I don’t know for sure.

    • @L4wyrup
      @L4wyrup 3 года назад

      @@bararobberbaron859 Except you don't really buy the container the drink is in. You can find indications of this. Some labels have actually written on them that the bottle remains property of the brewer/manufacturer. Also, on the receipt the deposit is listed separately. A little over the border, in Germany they call it Flaschenpfand, which does pretty much the same as what statiegeld does in the Netherlands, and literally translates to bottle deposit. Hence the explanation would be slightly altered to "You buy the drink, but not the bottle, you pay a small deposit per bottle wich can be recouped when returning the bottle."
      The bottle part makes it a bit easier to understand that some bottles have deposit and other don't, whereas cans and stuff do not have a deposit, at least until 2023. Maybe I'll call it container deposit then, that's a nice catch all term.
      There's one exception already, which is the deposit you pay for crates of beer. Usually 1,50-ish per crate, depending on size.

    • @maremwhe
      @maremwhe 3 года назад

      Bottle deposit or recycle deposit is the most logical to me. In Canada (or at least in Alberta) we have deposits on basically all drinking containers; cans, glass or plastic bottles of all sizes, tetra packs for juice or milk. If it doesn't have a deposit it can probably go in the blue bag recycling with carboard, tin cans, etc. But there are also Bottle Depots all over (places who will give you the money back for each one you bring), in the countryside it may be a longer drive but there's probably one in the same place as a larger grocery store. In the city there are lots and any cans/bottles that people throw on the street are picked up by the homeless for the refund.

    • @markjones1500
      @markjones1500 3 года назад

      Statiegeld=deposit. Simple.

  • @naboduari
    @naboduari 3 года назад

    ook in Belgie !

  • @mar10dg
    @mar10dg 3 года назад

    Not sure but I think kraamzorg might be translated as natal care. And regarding climatechange, you might want to look up the Urgenda climate case (Urgenda klimaatzaak). In 2015 the Urgenda organisation joined up with concerned/pissed off citizens to take the government to court over it. They won the case but government drove it through appeal after appeal right up to the supreme court. Ultimately the government lost the case but they have been dragging their heels ever since. Recently, last year I think, there was yet another report that they still hadn't even started with complying to the court's orders.
    Haha, as I compose this and read back to check for errors I realize my internal voice completely adopts your accent. Noticed it before when I speak to relatives living in Australia. Also happens when reading one of my fave books, The last continent by Terry Pratchett. Strewth! Oh well, no worries. LOL Happy you like living here.

  • @fonkelster
    @fonkelster 3 года назад

    1:20
    Thank you, that is very kind to say. I would like to make an exeption. We suck at climate policies.
    ~End message.

  • @Jaydon05
    @Jaydon05 3 года назад

    Good vid! I subd!

  • @RealConstructor
    @RealConstructor 3 года назад

    Hoi Casey, ik zou wel willen weten hoever de Nederlandse overheid is met de digitalisering. Ik hoor en lees weleens dat wij daar ver in zijn, maar nog niet zo ver als in Estland. Ik heb een korte tijd in Italië gewoond en daar is digitalisering niet aanwezig. De bejaarden stonden nog in de rij bij het postkantoor om hun pensioen elke maand contant te innen. Ik moet wel zeggen dat dit zo’n 10 jaar terug was, ik weet niet hoe het nu is. In Nederland doen we dit, al zolang als ik mij kan herinneren, giraal. In Nederland doen we ook al jaren belastingaangifte via internet, voor versimpelde aangifte zelfs via de App. Voor ons dus heel gewoon, maar hoe is dat in Australië?

  • @eronsentertainmentstore6487
    @eronsentertainmentstore6487 3 года назад

    though Kraamzorg was paternity care ?

  • @Needlestitch
    @Needlestitch Год назад

    Paris agreement and other EU, WEF, UN sh*t should not be an agreement, because we (populous) have had no say/vote in this. That's why a growing number of Dutch people will either not vote, or vote further to the right at the next election coming up on nov-22-2023.

  • @petermaardananders6803
    @petermaardananders6803 5 месяцев назад

    The Dutch electric network is overencumbered, we have to cut down on gas stoves etc. and the ""fix"" heating and cooling systems are predominatly electric.. Solar and wind power generators are making the problem bigger by the back supply to the net by private owners and farmers, and such causes allot of issues for the whole network. The supplying industries knew they always do, the government is misinformed by the industrial lobby and that lead to subsidies for obtaining solar and windpower, and that is the nicest scenario I can think of. Just like Electric powered cars don't make things easier either, and yes they are/ were subsidised as well. In the NL we have to hurry up getting our electric network up to demands, f.e. new build businesses are having big troubles getting connected. Not many are aware of this problem currently, and 3 years ago when you posted this even less people knew about this. We might even need to go nuclear for our electric power network system to get back on track with demands in the very near future, gas is not an option neither is coal, and wind/solar is not the fix all because how to store it when enough generated and supplied when needed. Its gotto be solved as soon as possible..

  • @DenUitvreter
    @DenUitvreter 3 года назад +1

    If you look into them a bit deeper, they're all not that great.
    - Health care is very inefficient because a lot of the actual care workers spend 40% of their time on bureaucracy that is necessery for the insurance companies to determine their profit because they have to pose as entrepreneurs with their government guaranteed clientele, only allowing them to run their own costly bureaucracy at the expense of the citizens. It's also a feast for unethical 'care cowboys' who manage to drain huge profits from the system for poor care while also hospitals have to be closed suddenly with patients in them because no one takes charge while they go bankrupt. The government subsidy to the poor as part of the system is only creating costly overhead. The business model is giving the wrong incentives to care workers and institutions, they often do unnecessary treatment because of turnover. The system also gives way to much power to insurance companies over both the careworkers and the patient, which power they're not accountable for.
    - Kraamzorg is great indeed. But when my neighbour gave birth I had to lend the kraamzorg my parking permit to make sure she could actually take some money home from her work. In general there are a lot of loose ends like that now a hard right neoliberal government has society and systems running at social democratic fumes from the past.
    - Paternity leave increased, it was about time and it's still not equality.
    - The agriculture is impressive, amazing even. But it's not sustainable, it's depleting the soil and simultaneously overbearing it. The water level the farmers want is also damaging to the soils capacity to support cities and other buildings.
    - The Paris agreement is turned into a scam in which the citizens pay and get the drawbacks in order for the industry to keep doing what they do. It's also put outside democracy and democratic control. It's more of a numbers and accounting exercise than actual benefit for the cllimate.
    - Recycling like that has been done since the 70's, little progress has been made since and with more plastic and other materials produced and consumed there's not really much progress. Recycling is good, but the recycling process is polluting in itself and produces rest waste that can't or won't be recycled but dumped. There's too little incentive to produce less rubbish that needs to be recycled.
    So it all looks much better at the front door than at the back door. That's because we've got a right wing government beeing their regular right wing about left wing ideas and policies from the past.

  • @Krzysztof25XD
    @Krzysztof25XD 3 года назад +2

    Do you have the feeling that Australian federal government is paid by mining industry? I’ve read a lot of bad things are happening in Australia in that regard.

    • @caseykilmore
      @caseykilmore  3 года назад +5

      Well noticed. The fact that the liberal party is in bed with the mining industry doesn't go unnoticed by anyone willing to look. There's massive campaigns everywhere about how reliant our economy is on the mining industry and how many jobs it provides. but when you look at the number and the facts of how many jobs it supplies people would be shocked to see that the wealth brought in by the industry isn't really being shared amongst as many people as they are lead to believe.

    • @Krzysztof25XD
      @Krzysztof25XD 3 года назад

      @@caseykilmore It should’ve been the Norwegian way, if there are some profits from natural ressources they need to fund the welfare for all. Moreover, Australia has such an enormous potential in renewables, it’s a crime not to use it.

    • @shrike6259
      @shrike6259 3 года назад

      yah over here govs are payed by similar club. the same mining club that mines all the resources to make solar panels / batteries / cell phones and other rare earth metals/minerals

  • @joostvm4350
    @joostvm4350 3 года назад +2

    Paternity leave 6 weeks?? I believe the fathers gets paid leave 5 days vs. 2 days previous. Our climate goals are indeed nice but there’s lawsuits against the government being to slack (NL = laks) to actually reach them. But all in all, we’re paying a ton of money to keep our social system in place but at least you can be sure almost everybody is looked after.

    • @HansKlaverwijden
      @HansKlaverwijden 3 года назад +1

      It's 5 days. You can take 5 additional weeks for 70% of your salary payed by the UWV. You can use the time as you like, so you can also spread the days out if you like. If your boss allows the spreading out off course.

    • @roelniessen2447
      @roelniessen2447 3 года назад

      @@HansKlaverwijden true. Of course it is an improvement from the previous situation, but the new paternity leave is only available for the people who can AFFORD losing 30% of their monthly salary. So the poorest people will not be able to benefit...

    • @RealConstructor
      @RealConstructor 3 года назад +2

      @@roelniessen2447 It’s harsh, but if you’re poor you shouldn’t have kids. You only take kids if you can afford them. Everything in The Netherlands is planned, even getting children. So plan this, it is extremely important. Kids shouldn’t be suffering because the parents are poor and wanted a kid. Only put a kid on this world if you can afford it.

  • @vnesje1981
    @vnesje1981 3 года назад

    Kraam zorg =maternity care! Yes I think it’s great. It’s also the reason why the home birth rate is so high.

  • @rikvlasblom4272
    @rikvlasblom4272 3 года назад

    hehe the pasta, nice one :)

  • @evanherk
    @evanherk 3 года назад +4

    The greenhouses are voracious users of fossil fuels for heating though.

    • @caseykilmore
      @caseykilmore  3 года назад

      Are they!!? They were smart not to mention that in the article I had read.

    • @RichardRenes
      @RichardRenes 3 года назад +5

      @@caseykilmore It IS getting less and less. More of them will be connected to industrial residual heat system eliminating the need for fossil fuels.

    • @evanherk
      @evanherk 3 года назад

      Yes. Heating is their main expense together with growing lights. Their energy is heavily subsidized, they pay about one third of the price for electricity that you do.

    • @woutervanr
      @woutervanr 3 года назад

      The amount of water and space they save though is enourmous.

    • @gert-janvanderlee5307
      @gert-janvanderlee5307 3 года назад +1

      @@woutervanr Actually, they use huge amounts of both.

  • @elonanuruw684
    @elonanuruw684 3 года назад +1

    Wait what, they give the funds?!?!

    • @Terrorrai1
      @Terrorrai1 3 года назад

      Yup, partialy, based on income. Also rent and kids get are subsidised.

  • @vogel2280
    @vogel2280 3 года назад

    You cannot give credits to the Dutch for paternity leave. The new rules were enforced by the EU. If you go to Italy and Scandinavia, they really know how to tear a hole in their careers...

  • @Ctrl_Del_0
    @Ctrl_Del_0 3 года назад

    Oh, I forgot to tell that besides the huge costs (energywise to make and dismantle a windmill, they are birdkillers. These wings fly round through the air with amazing speeds and a bird never knew wht hit him, litterally. When you go to windmills, you see birds lying around everywhere. So much for being good for the environment. Solalrpower and 4th (4th only!!!!!!!) generation nuclear energy is the way to go.

  • @joostprins3381
    @joostprins3381 3 года назад

    Health care, at 18 you’re an adult and have to pay it yourself, but wait, the basic insurance covers the most, extra dentist will cost you extra. So our son, a student, has to pay about 107 euro per month for his insurance, because he has no income he can get money back from the government, and guess, that’s also 107 euro, so in the end it’s free until he has income

  • @dutchyjhome
    @dutchyjhome 3 года назад

    Hey Casey, one rainy and windy paradise it is; The Netherlands, isn't it ;-)
    About our agriculture, go see this;
    ruclips.net/video/nM8Qz-fzJ6M/видео.html
    The voice over constantly talks about Holland, the man obviously means The Netherlands...
    and after this video a part 2 video is available as well.

  • @gijsvanlieshout
    @gijsvanlieshout 3 года назад

    Haha how nice that most foreigners view the Dutch healthcare system as 'almost perfect'. We, the Dutch, are always b*tching about it. By the way, many of these 'Dutch' systems can also be found in the Scandinavian countries. Even more extreme in some cases.
    More in general, it seems that foreigners are more enthusiastic about Dutch policies then we are. But then again, we don't get excited that much.

  • @malukulessy4670
    @malukulessy4670 3 года назад

    Yes i am happy in Holland my pension dubbel up with the AOW 👍🏽

  • @Playforfun1473
    @Playforfun1473 3 года назад

    Wel we have this in belgium as wel