Think of national wealth as six to eight times g d p on average. You can't just grab it all to pay off the debt overnight. We'll have to cut back our consumption at some point in the future. There will be a serious economic problem, i think, from this day. I don't think our world will fall apart to morrow, but we have spent beyond our means. But o, we have a plan, b, at least probably several, in the works for a restruction of the global economy with which your basic allotment is built into that.
Alexander the Grate has spent 40 years – more than half of his life – living on the streets (and heating grates) of Washington, DC. He prefers the label NFA (No Fixed Address) rather than “homeless,” since in his view we’re all a little bit homeless: even millionaires are just one catastrophe away from losing their mansions. It’s a life that certainly comes with many challenges, but that hasn’t stopped him from enjoying the immense cultural riches of the capital: he and his friends have probably attended more lectures, foreign films, concerts, talks, and tours at local museums than many of its wealthiest denizens. The result is a perspective as unique as the city itself.
Alexander joined Tyler to discuss the little-recognized issue of “toilet insecurity,” how COVID-19 affected his lifestyle, the hierarchy of local shelters, the origins of the cootie game, the difference between being NFA in DC versus other cities, how networking helped him navigate life as a new NFA, how the Capitol Hill Freebie Finders Fellowship got started, why he loves school field trip season, his most memorable freebie food experience, the reason he isn’t enthusiastic about a Universal Basic Income, the economic sword of Damocles he sees hanging over America, how local development is changing DC, his design for a better community shelter, and more.
Special thanks to James Deutsch for helping to arrange this interview. Read his profile of Alexander the Grate here.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded June 4th, 2021 Other ways to connect