So if you were not putting your backyard to good use you would not feel too bad if your neighbors decided to encroach on it?
The GP's analogy is extremely weak.
Some rich guy buys an amazing house on a beautiful California beachfront. But then never even bothers to stay there because he's got 3 other vacation homes. It just sits there empty all year long.
Would it be ok for someone to break in and start living there? No, of course not.
But you do have to kind of dislike that guy right? If he doesn't want to use this limited and valuable resource he should maybe give it up so someone else can get good use out of it.
"Would it be ok for someone to break in and start living there? No, of course not."
Dislike != ok to take my shit but it's still dislike.
I understand that you have not said that the situation the OP faced is deserved, but you don't feel too bad about it.
Unfortunately your defense does make it seem that you are not completely opposed to a framework that would take back "limited resources" not being used well. Most likely this is not your intention at all.
I often come across businesses/store locations and most importantly domain names that are not using even a small fraction of true potential. I do feel sorry for them, but I can't say I dislike them, they might dislike themselves if they knew what I knew.
The only way I can fathom the minutest possibility of disliking them is if they knew how to thrive and did not do anything, if it was common knowledge on how to do it right, but they chose not too.
Unfortunately most people don't know how to use potential or don't recognize it at all, can't dislike them for trying though.
Somebody just moved in and started living in his house. And just tossed all of his personal belongings out.
To be honest, I kind of disliked my friend for a while.
You mean Communism?
And if seizing it is too "communist" for you, then enormous taxes should be close enough to socialism.
There's nothing wrong with advocating the concept of sharing when a person obviously has more resources than he could actually use.
There is no reason he should have to give up @H just because he isn't utilizing it enough. The person that got it better not send a single tweet shorter than the maximum to fit your logic.
Land should not remain unused.
"They paved paradise, put up a parking lot." Joni Mitchell
IANAL, but I have a hard time believing that a court of law is going to issue a judgement of adverse possession where the perpetrator used fraud/identity theft, extortion and blackmail to come into possession of it.