I don't have a cell phone, but we can
communicate via e-mail (or, if you prefer,
Facebook, etc). I reserve the right to (and likely will) make any part of our communications public.
It has been my openly-expressed position since I first arrived at Tent City (on March 1, 2013) that
I refuse to accept any handouts of tax-payer money (that can be avoided). I chose to not be represented by your law firm, and am not a party to the "one year free housing to leave Tent City" agreement that some people have made. As a courtesy, I've agreed to provide all information that you wish to have about me, as I prefer to do everything in the open. For this reason I've agreed to
participate in the census to answer questions and be photographed, but not to carry an additional ID card.
I take full responsibility for my homelessness and penniless-ness, which are largely a consequence of my own choice to walk away from a promising career as a computer programmer, and to focus on self-directed studies, which, among other things, have led me to what most people would describe as radical libertarian (pro-capitalist / anti-socialist) political and philosophical views. By staying in
Minister Steve Brigham's Tent City, or by starting new ones on other secluded plots of "public land",
I am exercising Civil Disobedience against the anti-homelessness laws, which (as even many of my socialist debate opponents agree) are contrary to the NJ State and US Constitution.
Through my perpetual arrests and stints in jail, I also hope to bring attention to the failings of the Welfare State, and the hypocrisy of this dubious concept of "public property", as government apologists try to justify most government interventions in the marketplace "in the name of the poor".
I do not agree with the legal position that the government has an "obligation" to provide housing. Idealistically, I believe that this
involuntary redistribution of funds from the producers to those that fail to pull their economic weight
constitutes theft. Pragmatically, you will find that providing
free apartments / motel rooms isn't a viable solution for NJ's
12,000+ homeless individuals, especially as more and more brains, businesses, and jobs are fleeing the state due its
tax burden, which is already one of the highest in the nation. Elsewhere on the Internet, I make economic arguments that people like the
Tent City residents are victims of government intervention into the marketplace, which has created artificial scarcity in affordable housing and multiplied their cost of living.
My philosophical position, even if it isn't legislatively convenient, is that homeless people should (in circumstances such as ours) be allowed to
homestead so-called "public land". More specifically, this means that
the land on which we've built Tent City over the past 7+ years should be transferred to an NGO, to create a competently-managed community for otherwise-homeless individuals. I believe that communities such as Tent City, funded through
voluntary charity and mutual aid, can exist in harmony with nature and all of our surrounding neighbors. We can find ways to solve problems like smoke pollution, establish better resident screening and safety policies, gradually evolve from tents to "
tiny homes" as revenues permit, etc. Unlike the government housing, we can create a solution to homelessness that is simultaneously moral, compassionate rather than bureaucratic, cost-effective and accountable to its funders, and not contrary to the residents' individual incentive to find work.
While staying at Tent City, I have expressed my gratitude to Minister Steve and other Tent City supporters by taking on the role of the camp's "IT guy", "Webmaster", and administrative assistant. I communicate with (prospective) Tent City supporters
on Facebook, help Minister Steve answer e-mails and write letters, audio-record his sermons for patrons who cannot attend in person, help other Tent City residents fill out online application forms, etc.
This "one year of free housing" deal has caused the camp's population to swell, while donations have declined as many people have been misinformed by the press that Tent City's story is already over. Now more than ever Tent City needs to be able to communicate with the outside world, and I consider it my current calling to help with that the best that I can.
I understand that I may be forcefully dragged out of Tent City at any time - I've lived with that expectation since May. This will begin the dance of my perpetual disobedience and arrests (I hope
LPD officers don't get muscle crams in their arms from so much dragging of my
limp 300lb body). I would prefer that this be postponed - not as a courtesy to me, but to Minister Steve, if he considers my assistance to be helpful to his work, as he is contractually permitted to stay in Tent City until everyone else has been placed. If Minister Steve's Chapel and the rest of Tent City is to be bulldozed, I would prefer to be the penultimate resident to "leave" Tent City.
Best regards,
Alex Libman
http://Gplus.to/libman
http://Twitter.com/libmn
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