Over fifty years ago the military draft moved me from the east to the Rockies and desert southwest. Access to public lands was astounding and amazing. Tent camping introduced me to a majority of older, mainly retired people in campsites during the week. Weekends were a little different. I looked forward to my golden years.
There were a few trail bikes, and homemade dune buggies seen and heard occasionally. Large, mainly pristine grasslands and forest, even within an easy driving distance of metropolitan areas.
Looonngg record scratch: A working career and family limited camping opportunities, with extended time intervals revisiting places from years before. Now that I can, it's a little depressing.
The public lands, from my perspective, are to be shared by everyone, not for full-time living, moving from place to place. If you try to live full-time for free, on public lands, having spent money on what you need to do so, then my opinion is that you are depriving part-timers, that the lands were meant for, a place to camp. To me, saying you maintain the time stay limit, and then move elsewhere to do the same, is not a valid reason. That is not sharing.
I can easily provide various types of documentation to prove that I am a part-timer. I would not mind at all to do so if it would help preserve our supposedly SHARED public lands.
Bemoaning our taking of land from those our forefathers displaced, seems little different than the behavior of full-time free-campers on land never meant for full-time living.
Either prove you are a part-timer to use free dispersed camping, or be willing to pay a fee in a designated, controlled campground environment.
It really raises my hackles to hear a full-timer on public lands complain how close their neighbors are, when sometimes they are a quarter-mile away.