“What is up with some people’s complete disrespect for our public spaces? It doesn’t require a huge amount of effort and discipline to keep our streets, sidewalks, parks and shorelines clean. Yet some of us appear incapable.”

  • @Vinny_93
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    194 months ago

    I do not understand how in this day and age there are are people that just think 'I’ll just dump this here on the street "

    • @SamuelRJankis
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      64 months ago

      It’s even more amazing that people will toss a lit cigarette butt in the middle of droughts.

      Like I almost get why someone is so lazy they don’t care if things look or smell bad but casual arson is a hell of a leap.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        Honestly and unironically, the punishment for littering needs to be a lot harsher, and strictly enforced.

        Leave a coffee cup on the ground? Jail.
        Don’t pick up your dog’s shit? Jail.
        Toss a cigarette butt on the sidewalk? Straight to jail, no trial.

    • @preach224
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      14 months ago

      by us (not in canada, but your shittier southern neighbour), it’s all beer cans.

      like, bad enough you’re driving while chugging a tallboy of natty ice, but you gotta throw it in our yard on your way by, too?

      i shouldn’t be surprised that the venn diagram is a circle, but for some reason i always am.

  • OsaErisXero
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    54 months ago

    Does Montreal also have zero publically accessible trashcans for miles at a time? Because everywhere I’ve personally seen this be a problem, there are zero trash cans anywhere.

    • @[email protected]
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      114 months ago

      Japan has virtually no public trash cans, and has some of the cleanest urban centers in the world.

      • @[email protected]
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        64 months ago

        Montreal is a long way from having the kind of culture where they can have no garbage cans AND no litter. Let’s just put some garbage cans in problem areas and reduce the trash problem.

      • wpuckering
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        54 months ago

        Can confirm, I’m living there right now. People here tend to take proper personal responsibility for their own garbage and mess.

        • @[email protected]
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          4 months ago

          It helps to grow up cleaning your own schools and having being taught personal responsibility from a very young age. I have no doubt there are still elementary kids commuting to other towns alone by train to go to school, as there were when I was living there.

          • @NarrativeBearOP
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            4 months ago

            A little anecdotal, but I personally try and go outside every or every other Sunday at minimum to pickup litter around my local trails.

            What I find is the only people that say thank you verbally are stereotypical Canadians, or Canadians that seem to be second generation at the least in my eyes.

            Everyone else that does not fit this stereotype seems to have a weird look on their face that almost mirrors a look of disgust or hate. Its very confusing TBH. What’s also quite interesting is that when people do stop and have a conversation with me the first question always is, “are you doing community service, or do you work for the city”.

            My answer is usually the same, “no, I am just out for a walk enjoying the trail”. There seems to be a stigma that picking up garbage makes you less and not more.

            To add, I’m not picking up litter for strangers, I’m picking it up for myself. I enjoy going for a walk on clean trail, and we both know if you don’t do something yourself no one will do it for you.

            • @[email protected]
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              34 months ago

              Interesting observation. I’ve done the same myself, at least in urban surroundings. I hope it makes your walk more enjoyable and satisfying.