I stumbled here a few years back while searching for technical advice. My above post was not meant to be trolling, but simply the reflections of changes in camping from part-time to media influences that encourage full-time living on shared public lands never meant for full-time living. The name of this forum at the top of the page does not include the words full-time or free.
I dont think of your post as 'trolling'...but something to keep in mind is that millions of Americans have been 'full timing' on public lands for decades. Maybe it seems new, or recent, but it's not.
What IS new is that the numbers have increased and it's all over youtube, facebook, nightly news, and even the big screen (movies like Nomadland).
It's trendy, and it's cool, and it's glamorous now: Hunky dudes and curvy chix living the life in a nice new van camper, and affiliate links allow them to make a living off the viewers, and widespread internet helps many to make a remote digital career out of it, which was not practical before.
Previously, if you dropped out of civilization and lived on the road in an RV, a van, your old family wagon, or a horse-drawn gypsy vardo, nobody knew, and almost nobody cared.
Today, right now, If you could snap your fingers and 'fix' all this, what would happen to the millions who are successfully living on the road, and would have to end up in possibly substandard inner city housing, maybe section 8, or competing for affordable housing...which always raises prices. Or maybe piled up like cordwood in crappy little apartments or parked bumper-to-bumper along public roads and in abandoned retail parking lots.
In other words, where would we put everyone? It's not just a few thousand, the number is in the MILLIONS.
As I see it, 'wear-leveling' (a term used for solid-state drives) is a good solution: Spreading people out on less populated lands, and as a result, reducing the concentrated negative impact on limited resources and supplies in already overcrowded cities.
Or so it seems to me.