- taopaiLike driving a car.
- I recall experiencing an incredibly fast hallucination with my eyes closed—like tiny dots moving at an extreme speed.
Faster than anything I had ever seen, almost like an intense vibration, beyond the refresh rate of the eye. It was both intimidating and exhilarating.
Perhaps screens are unable to replicate this type of hallucination.
The animations on this website are impressive. However, in my experience, closed-eye visuals tend to have a central focal point, along with folding or tunnel-like movements and recurring patterns.
I feel deeply grateful for having had some psychedelic experiences, even though hallucinations are the least interesting aspect of them. For me, they acted as a magnifying glass for my overall state of being—allowing me to step outside myself and honestly assess how I feel. They also foster a deeper appreciation for nature.
It would be fascinating to have this discussion within this community. These substances are often demonized due to a lack of understanding, yet they can have a profound impact. For instance, after taking a small dose of LSD, I completely lost interest in alcohol. In the past six months, I’ve only had three nights of drinking, lost a significant amount of weight, and feel fantastic.
- Tourism is making this country 3rd world.
There is plenty of industry and jobs in the north.
If the south keep relying on tourism they will keep this misery going.
I don't care if you are born here. I only care if you work and contribute here. Tourism is killing people.
Look at Barcelona. Before the Olympics it was a amazing place to live. Now it's rotten and prostituted to expats, tourists and poor people who go there to work in inhuman jobs paying unpayable rents.
- Awesome! Really awesome.
I hope that German secondary physics and chemistry teacher who has an amazing free pdf book about tikz sees this.
This was such a great and didactic book to real tkiz. I can't find it right now, but must be somewhere.
- It's not just that.
Morada is any property that you live, use to live or use to do private activities in it.
If you used at least once a year or so, then is morada. Like if it was your primary house.
If you have a semi demolished house, or unused house during years, then clearly is it not a morada. That's the difference.
- We are getting poorer because people invest in real state to their benefit without adding any social value to our lives. Only to higher our rent and making touristic flats. Which crowds our streets with noise and filth while the benefits are for foreign companies that are prostituting our cities like a thematic park.
- I know a guy who lived in a unfinished house.
He was like inspector gadget.
He did the whole electrical installation and had a giant water deposit on the basement that he filled once a month with the waterolympics: getting the water from the next street from a fire hydrant. Such a great guy. With a lot of social conscience, firm to his ideals and he worked!
- You are right.
If you okupas you always ocupas. But you can ocupar without okupar.
The k differences the political movement from the physical act of using a property which is not yours. Okupas don't promote squatting in a small owner property. They promote using unused properties from banks.
In fact in Barcelona there are la Oficina d'okupació:
- Antena3, lol! This is one of most sensationalist TV channel in spain.
The media always look for this situations and portray they because are shocking.
This is not okupation, and has nothing to do with the movement.
This laws primary are there to protect families and people who rent.
I know at least 15 okupas, who lived +4 on bank unused, and still unused, properties. This okupas helped to not saturate the market. They all worked in touristic areas where housing is scarce, and this makes hiring people very difficult because workers doesn't have a place to live and rent is crazy high.
- It's ironic: in the US you have the freedom to kill, but not the freedom to be saved in a hospital. Just the opposite of Spain.
- Great. I am glad to hear this.
You forgot about people who live there all year round. You know, the ones who work, maintain services, offer food, have children who will keep everything working.
Spain shouldn't be a big hotel, it is also the country of people who live all year round.
- This is not like this.
The point is, if you break anything to enter you used force and it's much worse.
But if it's your residence, your house, and at least you used once a year is "morada", and then they are intruders and they are breaking the law.
It doesn't matter if they change the lock or anything like this. If mossos doesn't do anything, which would amaze me, then call the other forces, like civil, local o nacional.
If you let a house unused all year long or during years, it's your problem. I don't know what's the purpose of owning a house and not using it, in this case, I would appreciate that someone breaks in to live there with pacifically, this people exist.
- You can but you can end in prison.
This is not like USA were you shoot anyone who enters in your property.
If you harm this people you surely will have to face penal consequences.
Why? Because then, people will do the same with a small family which can not pay rent this month, after you increased the price to the double because you want to rent to tourists.
The solution is simple: use your properties. Would you let your car with the keys inside? No. Don't let your houses unused. It's is an offense to people who want to work and live. Properties shouldn't be a business nor a speculative means.
- Some people used to say that touristic companies promoted this to lower prices and buy cheap to remodel whole neighborhoods.
Like Raval. Some German companies had bought whole buildings and know they rent their flats, or even worst, rooms in flats with locks. This is crazy.
I've been in such a place, in the heart of Raval, full of drug addicts, and filth enter to a place remodeled inside with small rooms who "expats" pay a lot, A LOT. It's crazy.
- I know no one who had his first home or summer house squatted. No one.
I've lived here all my life.
I know at least 15 okupas who lived +4 years in properties of banks, unused and not finished, which, after eviction, are still unused and unmaintained. What harm did this okupas do? They didn't contributed to rent inflation, so they did some good.
Having property unused and don't having an eye on it is madness. I wouldn't do it. That's common sense. People think that money buy things. Ok, buy a Ferrari and park it outside of a big city and leave it there during a month.
This law is here to protect the right of housing. Some mafias use it? Could be, but this law works to protect real families and the benefits are much greater than the harm that opportunists do abusing it, this organizations doesn't have anything to do with the okupa movement.
- - Have you worked there with the average salary?
- Have you met the reality of working class people there?
- Have you stayed on a touristic city or on industrial areas?
- The real criminals are people from Spain, speculative funds and tourists from all over the world buying property here and not using it. They steal to everybody.
Then we can't hire people for our business because people can't find rent. We aren't paying low, the problem is the crazy rent market.
Banks own 80% of not used living places in Spain. Tell me who is the burglar. Real okupas only squat in this places, I know a lot, and surprise! Banks will get you out faster than anyone else but keep their property unused and rotting. Because they don't care about houses, they only care about land.
Spanish constitution states that housing is a human right. That's the difference. If someone enters to your home, people will bust them, if someone enters to your speculative bargain or summer whim, good luck, people want to live.
- It's an investment. Every investment has a risk. It's your responsibility to find ways to mitigate this risk, like renting to someone you know or having a modest price to someone who can pay afford it vastly, no to anyone that looks the cheapest rent.
That's why people sing contracts of X years, and asks for employment contracts and a minimum quantity of money in the bank. In this situations you can still get it wrong, but that's investing, it's always risky.
- In 2007 you could rent a flat in Barcelona for ~500 euros. Know a two room ugly old flat will cost you at least 1000 euros. And still raising.
A normal flat will cost you 1500 euros, which is the average monthly net salary there.
- Rumination is also great.
Just focus on the problem. Let imagination flow, but just focus on the problem, on the obstacle. Don't get lost on solutions, just inundate your mind with the problem, on the bad aspects, don't try to make you feel good with wishful solutions.
Then let it rest. Or keep ruminating. It's amazing how fast, and how frequent, you get some kind of epiphany or eureka moment.
Then do numbers or study your answers with a rational mindset.
Values are also and awesome and usually unknown compass. "Get out of your mind and into your life" from Steven Hayes has a great definition of what values are. It's a great book, I know about it from hackernews.
This book also tells a interesting idea. Some times you don't have to decide, you have to make a choice. A choice is arbitrary, there a lot of crossroads in life which don't have a objective solution.
- > Just imagine what it would look like if everyone on HN posted more than they read.
Imagine that every active user on HN wrote 100 comments everyday and only submitted the 5 best.
create != share