thanks for sharing. they are promoting their freedom of expression and choice. this is what defines their country
although a picture that is missing is that of a mixed race couple. even in Netherlands few parts. black and white couple are seen with a dim view.
These are mixed race and mixed ethnicity couples, I think you missed that.
Mixed relationships vary according to background
24/01/2017 15:00
The number of marriages or registered partnerships between native Dutch people and people with a migration background varies, depending on the origin of the non-native partner. The smallest proportion of mixed couples is seen among men and women with Turkish or Moroccan roots. They mostly have partners from their own origin group, according to figures released by Statistics Netherlands (CBS).
Among the 4.2 million couples in the Netherlands (2016), nearly 659 thousand households - 16 percent of all couples - are made up of a native Dutch partner (either male or female) and a partner with a migration background. Most common are Indonesian-Dutch households (160 thousand), followed by German-Dutch (154 thousand) and Belgian-Dutch households (44 thousand).
There are relatively few mixed couples with one partner of Turkish or Moroccan descent and the other from a native Dutch background: nearly 10 thousand Dutch men and women have a partner of Turkish origin, while over 9 thousand have a partner with Moroccan roots. Married or registered partners of people with Turkish background (male or female) are native Dutch in 11 percent of the cases; this share is 12 percent among those of Moroccan origin. These are mostly couples consisting of a native Dutch female partner and a Turkish or Moroccan male partner.
People from other origin groups are more likely to establish a relationship with someone from outside of that group. For example, 46 percent of all couples including a Surinamese-origin partner are Surinamese-Dutch couples. Almost 90 percent of all couples including a Belgian or a German partner are Belgian-Dutch or German-Dutch couples respectively.
Nearly always in matrimony
Aside from preferring a partner from within their own origin group, people of Turkish or Moroccan origin are also more traditional and get married relatively more often compared to other (origin) couples. Cohabitation is almost non-existent among these groups: nine in ten persons with a Turkish or Moroccan background live together in matrimony. Among couples including a partner with Surinamese or Antillean background, slightly more than half are married couples.
https://www.cbs.nl/en-gb/news/2017/03/mixed-relationships-vary-according-to-background
In the Netherlands, 1 in 6 of marriages and registered partnerships are mixed ethnicity and/or mixed race. 16 percent is in 2017 is UP from 13% in 2001
Mixed marriages
08/10/2001 10:00
There are nearly 3.5 million married couples in the Netherlands.
In thirteen percent of these marriages, at least one of the partners was born outside the Netherlands. This percentage is higher than the percentage of non-Dutch born people in the population of the country. A total 1.5 million people who live in the Netherlands were not born here, nine percent of the population. The former percentage is higher than the latter because a large number of people born abroad are married to people born in the Netherlands.
There are nearly half a million married couples of whom one or both the partners were born abroad. In half of these, both partners come from another country. In the other half, there are slightly more couples with a foreign wife than with a foreign husband.
Large differences
Traditionally many marriage migrants come from Belgium and Germany to the Netherlands. Slightly more women come from these countries to marry Dutch men than the other way around.
The composition of marriages with one partner of Mediterranean origin is remarkable. For example, two out of three Dutch-Italian marriages are between an Italian man and a Dutch woman. Many labour migrants arriving in the early sixties found a Dutch wife and stayed on here.
The situation is completely different for people from Turkey and Morocco, for whom mixed marriages are very rare: in more than 85 percent of marriages involving these nationalities, both partners come from the same country. More people from Suriname, on the other hand, marry a Dutch partner: one in three marriages are to Dutch born partners.
Argentinean women more popular than Argentinean men
Women from South America and countries like the Philippines and Thailand are popular among Dutch men. In 2000 there were some 600 married couples of whom one or both partners came from Argentina In half of these couples the woman was Argentinean, in one quarter the man and in the remaining quarter both partners came form Argentina.
https://www.cbs.nl/en-gb/news/2001/41/mixed-marriages
Mixed race kids a new phenomenon in the Netherlands? We think not.
June 11, 2014
Mixed children are a growing phenomenon in the Netherlands (up from 30% to 37% from 2007 in Amsterdam)
http://africasacountry.com/2014/06/mixed-race-kids-a-new-phenomenon-in-the-netherlands-we-think-not/
Clearly, this doesn't mean mixed couples and their offspring do not face challenges, but the numbers do inform that it is more and more common in most groups.