Good explanation, but this title is incredibly misleading. Marijuana was <i>never</i> legal in the Netherlands[0], for tourists <i>or</i> residents. As the linked answer itself points out, it was only tolerated.<p>Until November 2012, there was no place in the world where marijuana was truly legal, except (possibly) North Korea[1]. Even still, it's a stretch to say that marijuana is legal in Washington State and Colorado, since the Feds could easily decide tomorrow that they want to crack down on it, and you could be arrested[2].<p>The distinction between legality and tolerance is important. Decriminalization and/or tolerance provide only a small subset of the benefits of true legalization. Without true legalization, you cannot have (ex.) quality control via local regulators, nor can you choke off drug cartels by undercutting one of their most profitable products. (Instead, you may even end up putting money <i>into</i> their pockets, depending on where you source the marijuana from - thankfully, this is less of an issue in Colorado and Washington).<p>Anyway, marijuana is now clearly less illegal in Colorado than in the Netherlands (in Denver, it is allowed under <i>both</i> city[3] and state law, though not federal law). Personally, I'm glad that the US now has its own place to go for marijuana tourism (similar to Tijuana for alcohol) - one could say that this is US protectionism at its finest!<p>[0] Well, at least not since the US started exporting its drug policy worldwide several decades ago.<p>[1] Alaska has a similar policy in private residences since 1977 due to a state court ruling on the right to privacy, but it is still illegal. North Korea has been cited as the one exception to this rule (ironically), but reports of its legality there are mixed.<p>[2] Look at what happened in Harborside and Oaksterdam (when cracking down on medical dispensaries, the Obama administration has used an underhanded tax catch-22 as political cover for busting shops that he previously said he'd allow, but the effect is the same).<p>[3] Denver legalized marijuana by city vote in 2006, and Breckenridge, CO legalized marijuana by town vote in 2009