The news from the Netherlands is both shocking and, for the cynical historian, utterly predictable. Dutch police are now investigating the systematic mass drugging of women in nightlife districts, a practice that has sent a shudder through the Hague and prompted urgent calls from the UK for a Europe-wide crackdown on sexual predators. The afflicted souls are victims of a new and particularly vile trend: the administration of incapacitating substances, often disguised as party favours, to render women vulnerable to assault.
Let us not mince words here. This is a public health crisis that reeks of societal decay. It is not merely a crime wave; it is a symptom of an advanced stage of intellectual and moral decadence. When Continental elites spend their weekends arguing over gender pronouns and the finer points of intersectionality, predatory men are busy perfecting the chemistry of coercion. The Dutch, once famed for their stoic pragmatism and cleanliness, now preside over a landscape where a night out can end in a chemical hell.
The parallels to the late Roman Empire are, as ever, sickeningly apt. As the Empire frayed at the edges, its cities became dens of hedonism and exploitation. The satires of Juvenal describe a Rome where women could be drugged and violated with impunity, where the powerful used narcotics as tools of control. Today’s European Union, with its labyrinthine bureaucracy and toothless policing, has become the new Rome. The Barbarians are not at the gates; they are inside the club, slipping a pill into your drink.
Let us examine the UK’s response. The call for a European crackdown is, at its core, an admission that the nation-state has failed. Why should we need a supranational body to protect women from criminals? Because our own systems have become so administratively bloated and culturally confused that they cannot act decisively. The Home Secretary’s plea is a cry of weakness, not strength. It is the sound of a civilisation that no longer trusts its own reflexes.
The problem, you see, is not a lack of laws. The Netherlands has some of the most permissive drug laws in Europe. The problem is a cultural vacuum where responsibility is abdicated in favour of ‘rights’. The right to party, the right to an unregulated good time, has superseded the right to safety. Until Europeans rediscover the Victorian virtues of self-restraint, personal honour, and institutional authority, this rot will continue. The Dutch street, once a model of bourgeois order, is now a laboratory for pharmaceutical predators.
In conclusion, we must look this horror square in the face. The drugging of women is not a glitch in an otherwise functional society. It is the logical outcome of a civilisation that worships pleasure and forgets duty. The UK, for all its Brexit bluster, is correct to raise the alarm. But let us not pretend that a new EU task force will save us. Salvation, if it comes, will be from the bottom up: from fathers who teach their sons the meaning of honour, from communities that enforce shame, and from a legal system that treats these crimes as what they are: acts of war against the social fabric.
We are all Dutch women now. The question is whether we still have the will to fight back.








