Protesters in Barcelona have sprayed visitors with water as part of a demonstration against mass tourism.

Demonstrators marching through areas popular with tourists on Saturday chanted “tourists go home” and squirted them with water pistols, while others carried signs with slogans including “Barcelona is not for sale.”

Thousands of protesters took to the streets of the city in the latest demonstration against mass tourism in Spain, which has seen similar actions in the Canary Islands and Mallorca recently, decrying the impact on living costs and quality of life for local people.

The demonstration was organised by a group of more than 100 local organizations, led by the Assemblea de Barris pel Decreixement Turístic (Neighborhood Assembly for Tourism Degrowth).

  • @krashmo
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    1825 days ago

    Sounds like a great rule to implement if your goal is completely ineffective protests.

    • @[email protected]
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      325 days ago

      Consent is key. Even if it’s a toy, touching/interacting/trapping someone in public is not cool.

      If your protest doesn’t maintain consent, it’s a mob.

      • @krashmo
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        1225 days ago

        If your protest isn’t inconvenient it’s going to be ignored.

        • @[email protected]
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          25 days ago

          Inconvenience isn’t what I called out.

          Taking a space and making your voice heard is great. Surrounding and touching certain individuals is not. It lacks consent.

          Edit as another critical point why this behavior isn’t ok:

          In this case, it just so happens they are “targeting” tourists. What if it was far right extremists “targeting” immigrants? Even if they did the exact same thing (squirt guns), that would obviously be inappropriate. My point in this second paragraph is that encouraging or normalizing mob like behavior is not ok, because someday it may be used for a more dangerous or hateful topic.

          • @krashmo
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            425 days ago

            Nazis don’t give a shit what people think is acceptable. That comes with the territory. I know you think you’re being kind by saying protests need to be sterile and out of the way but all you’re really doing is helping rich people keep them ineffective. How’s that been going for the last 50 years?

            • @[email protected]
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              25 days ago

              Ignoring consent is not something I’ll agree with. Edit it’s literally always wrong.

              Targeting individuals is always wrong, even with a toy.

              The point is if you normalize mob behavior, when the “Nazis” come they’ll be operating within the space you built. “What bro, I’m just protesting by surrounding this immigrant family and harassing them”

              I never said sterile. I never said out of the way. I said don’t trap, don’t touch, don’t harass individuals.

              Respect individual consent. Protest systems, not individuals, because that is mob behavior.

              • @krashmo
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                225 days ago

                Yes you never said sterile but that’s still the kind of protest you’re describing. To avoid any further semantic confusion let’s try a different approach, why don’t you describe what your ideal protest to deal with this tourism issue, or any other issue, looks like? Where does it take place and what kind of action occurs during it?

                • @[email protected]
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                  25 days ago

                  Any protest that does not threaten, harass, entrap, or otherwise victimize individuals. No vigilante justice, no “stick it to em”, no risk to health or safety.

                  If you can’t agree to that, there’s no point in me describing a protest I agree with, because we arent getting off the starting line.

                  Edit consent is not “semantics” what the fuck

                  • @krashmo
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                    225 days ago

                    People can spin any action you choose to fit that definition and by extension deny your right to protest. That’s the point. If you don’t see that then you’re right, there’s no reason to continue this conversation.

      • @claudiop
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        224 days ago

        When did locals consent to have their city taken over?

        When the purchasing power disparity is too big, you create this imbalance where you can’t just refuse them while at the same time you know that long term it fucks everything up badly.

        Businesses will accept them given that they can now charge triple rate for everything. Politicians get extra tax revenue and benefit from bits of corruption here and there. Meanwhile the commoner has to figure another place to live.

        The entire south of Portugal (so, not all that far from Barcelona) is now devoid of locals. If you go there in the winter you get to see almost-empty-towns that used to be major cities. Everyone moved to Lisbon. And now that Lisbon also happens to have grown to be an hot spot as well? You guessed it, people mass moving as well, this time for another countries.

        A few years back, our PM literally told us to emigrate; that’s how bad things got in here.

        As for political parties that “want” to “solve this”, it is basically a single party show; the far right.

        • @[email protected]
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          24 days ago

          Classic. You’re applying systemic issues onto the individual. It wasn’t “taken over”. Private property was used for business means. (Tourism). That’s an issue between landowners and the state, not between 2 (or more) random people on the street. Everyone in that system consented. The tourists are there legally, and should not be the victim of mob practices.

          Always maintain the consent and autonomy of others. Simple stuff.

          • @claudiop
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            24 days ago

            Plenty of movements went on due to public pressure through protests. iIRC the Dutch pro-livable cities movement started that way, with protests against cars, half a century ago.

            Also, you’re giving to tourists a right while stripping it from ourselves. You forget that in a crowd you’re going to have some that are going to break into private property, halt streets and do all kinds of dumb shit in the name of an Instagram picture.

            Touristing and handling garbage can be seen the same way. You can think a bit about what bin to use and that takes some extra effort or you can just throw everything in the general because it is easier.

            You’re touristing in another countries for like 1 week a year. That means that the ratio of time you’re touristing to the time you’re not is like 53:1, assuming that everyone does the same (which is def not the case). So, a perfectly balanced town in this hypothetical reality has 1 person touristing for each 53 not doing it. In some parts of these cities the opposite happens. It is so massive that you get many times more tourists than locals and that is enough to get everything malfunctioning.

            Barcelona just had to remove bus lines from Google Maps to let locals have a chance to ride them. How is this fair? And this is the authorities doing something as you just advocated for. They got called out for that as xenophobic and whatnot. So, tell me, if I live in a place with a nice environment, how to I go to work? And how do I keep a house and a job given the rent increases sponsored by the millions that want to prop up their Instagram? If we can’t forbid them from coming, what exactly should we do that is not going to be called xenophobic? Tax it to reduce their numbers? That’s also condemned by plenty as gentrification. What is the good solution exactly?

            • @[email protected]
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              -224 days ago

              Again, sounds rough. Barcelona should change.

              But individuals do not deserve to be trapped or harassed for doing something legal.

              The issue lies solely between residents, property owners and the government.

              Don’t target individuals.

              Use some critical thinking, Im not defending unlimited tourism. I’m not discussing the situation in Barcelona at all really. I’m talking about the fundamentals of ethical protest. If your point requires you to abuse individuals, you aren’t protesting, you’re a mob.

              If “you” so casually ignore consent and bodily autonomy in public, what’s happening in private?

              • @claudiop
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                124 days ago

                There are plenty of legal things that are condemnable.

                Going to a place that you know upfront that is suffering like this, where you know that you’re contributing a teeny bitsy to get someone homeless, jobless and cultureless might be legal but it isn’t moral.

                One might argue that most tourists do not know that. They simply look up some “top 17 best places to go in summer 2024” and off they go. They think that they are going to ride in a lovely tram through lovely streets and then some paradisiac beach when reality is smelling sweaty butts through crowds all the way.

                But how to you convince dumb tourists to be smart and moral tourists when there are plenty of good places they can go to that aren’t overcrowding (even in these same countries)? I personally dunno. And since you think that individuals should not be concerned then you probably prefer some other route.

                We can have quotas, but then you get gentrification. Whoever is the richest gets in and the others do not.That’s also terrible. Plus you’d get a black market with illegal renting due to market pressures.

                What solution do you propose exactly?

                • @[email protected]
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                  124 days ago

                  I propose not targeting individuals with a mob.

                  I propose turning that group back from a mob, into a protest, and getting in the government’s face.

                  Like, the tourists walked into a door marked: “free candy, please come in. Yes, you!”, then once through, are told “how dare you, we have so little candy for ourselves”. They can’t undo that they walked through the door. They were invited through. The folks inside should instead take the issue up with whoever put the sign on the door, and work to take that down.

                  • @claudiop
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                    123 days ago

                    I propose turning that group back from a mob, into a protest, and getting in the government’s face.

                    Has happened, hundreds of times. Zero effect. Governments couldn’t love anything more but free money that comes independently of the well being of their citizens. Dutch disease 2.0. Plus, the Madrid government isn’t exactly known for attending Catalonia’s needs. For some reason they tried to declare independence 9999 times in these last decades.

                    The folks inside should instead take the issue up with whoever put the sign on the door, and work to take that down.

                    Well, having a reputation for being annoying towards tourists is a sign by itself. And put yourself in the shoes of those fellas. What can they realistically do if the democratic process doesn’t cut? Should they just abandon their land?