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From David Harsanyi at
The National Review:
One of the greatest accomplishments
of the urban liberal do-gooder was cleaning up these cities. At some
point in the early 1980s, citizens, not merely the wealthy but also the
middle and working classes (in those days they could still afford to
live in our big cities), got sick of wading through rubbish and began
browbeating their neighbors into decency.
It still took decades to fix the
litter problem — and, obviously, it would never be completely corrected —
but the city streets were no longer complete dumps. Not Switzerland or
Tokyo clean, for sure, but bearable. And though laws certainly helped
with the cleaning up, it was a dramatic shift in social norms that
really did the trick. Signs told people to curb their mutts. Signs told
people to throw out their trash. PSAs began inundating the airwaves in
the ’70s. How long could we ignore Iron Eyes Cody, the fake Indian in
one of those PSAs imploring us to “keep America beautiful,” after he saw
some savage throw trash from a speeding car? “People start pollution;
people can stop it.” They could. Mostly by shaming those who trashed the
city.
I bring up all this unpleasantness
because it seems to me that many of the children and grandchildren of
these heroic litter-fighters, people who haven’t had to step over broken
bottles daily, are allowing our cities to backslide. I have no way of
quantifying the relapse, but whenever I go back to my hometown it sure
feels a bit more like the 1970s, and I don’t write those words
nostalgically. “All of us have to deal with the filth that collects on
the side of the road, making our community look uninviting and run
down,” a spokesperson for one of the few current anti-litter campaigns
in the city, Staten Island’s “Operation Clean Sweep,” recently
complained. “The more litter we have on our streets, the more it becomes
an accepted part of life.” (Read more.)
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