Casa Milà's Last Squatter: Libtard Architect's Dream Home Now Held Hostage by Rent Control!
Some old broad is leeching off Gaudí's genius thanks to commie rent control, while tourists pay €30 to see the roof. Wake up, sheeple!

Barcelona, Spain - So, get this: Antoni Gaudí, the OG architect who Triggered The Libs™ with his insane Casa Milà design, is probably spinning in his grave. Why? Because some 70-year-old dame, Ana Viladomiu, is still living there for pennies on the dollar thanks to the joys of renta antigua, aka Spanish rent control. This isn't about affordable housing; it's about government-sanctioned theft from the rightful property owners.
La Pedrera, they call it. The Quarry. Fitting, because Viladomiu is basically mining the system for all it's worth. A million tourists a year flock to see this architectural marvel, dropping Euros like it's hot, while she's kicking back in her rent-controlled paradise, probably laughing all the way to the bank (after taking the garbage out, of course, while avoiding the paps).
Caixa Catalunya, a bank that went belly up faster than a CNN+ subscriber count, bought out all the other tenants. But not Ana. Oh no, she's special. Maybe they figured having a 'resident' would add some 'authenticity' to the tourist trap. Or maybe they were just too woke to evict a senior citizen. Either way, it's a travesty.
She whines about tourists taking her picture when she's rocking her pajamas. Cry me a river. You're living in a freakin' UNESCO World Heritage Site, rent-free! Get over yourself. This is peak First World Problems.
Renta antigua. Fixed rent. Sounds like something Bernie Sanders cooked up in his Vermont cabin. These contracts are a relic of the past, a socialist pipe dream that distorts the market and screws over property owners. They stopped handing them out in 1985, but 100,000 of these time bombs are still ticking across Spain. Thanks, government.
Vinçon, her late hubby's designer store, is gone. Closed in 2015. Another victim of the failing economy, no doubt fueled by government overreach and socialist policies. But hey, at least she's got her sweet pad, subsidized by the tourists and taxpayers.
When she finally kicks the bucket, the non-profit foundation gets the apartment back. Until then, she's living the high life, a queen in her rent-controlled castle. The lesson? Get a government handout while the getting's good. It's the American dream, Spanish style.
So next time you're in Barcelona, shelling out Euros to gawk at Gaudí's masterpiece, remember Ana Viladomiu. The face of rent control, the bane of property owners, and a testament to the enduring power of socialist policies to screw up a perfectly good economy. And don't even get me started on the peregrine falcons freeloading at the Sagrada Familia. It never ends!

