Maybe it's because I as a kid was always told by my parents not to drop litter.
Maybe it's because there was a huge "Keep Britain Tidy" movement on TV showing clips of cartoon characters dropping or collecting trash and, later, celebrity actors clearing rubbish in comical style.
Maybe it's because I was born and brought up in a National Park where, at one time, visitors (and locals too) treated the countryside with greater respect.
Maybe it's because I became a policy director of an environmental charity within that park, and had responsibilities to help reduce the amount of trash that people left behind when camping, walking, climbing, fishing or just driving around to view the scenery.
Whichever, I cannot stand seeing junk dumped any old place. It winds me up. Particularly when it is plastic junk - bags and bottles or other packaging. They simply should not be necessary at a time when the world recognises the damage that they cause to our environment.
It is easy to blame those who drop the trash for being too lazy to take it home with them. Here, the problem stems from there being inadequate facilities for householders to dispose of the rubbish even if they take it home. So, let's tackle the issue from the opposite direction and blame product manufacturers and stores for using non-degradable materials when they sell their wares to the public. Bottles used to be taken back to shops by kids for a few pennies of cents of pocket money - and they learned that other trash wasn't to be dumped anywhere other than in bins: a good habit to learn. Parents who smoked cigarettes and threw the stubs and packets away in the street showed terrible examples to their kids who would then throw their sweet and candy wrappers away in the same way. Watch as car drivers wait in carparks or at traffic lights and throw the contents of their ashtrays onto the street! Who taught them to do that?
Here, waste treatment facilities for the public are woefully inadequate, but we can rely on our trash being collected from our gates by "rag and bone" men and women who find money in recycling. It doesn't extend to those builders and contractors (and others too) who dump construction waste as Coffee's photo shows. Creating landfill sites is not desirable anymore, but allocating space in appropriate surroundings for those who have no other options would be reasonable: the rubble could be crushed and reused - for raising construction land levels for example. Eventually, the dumped rubbish does seem to be cleared away, somehow. Why not do this immediately rather than wait months or years? It takes funding of course, but costs increase with time, they don't reduce!
Videos of rivers, lakes and klongs show quite graphically the volume of waste with which Thailand is burying itself. The West is also guilty of sending its waste to S.E. Asia (form which some of it is now being refused and returned to the West!
I once lived in a county where recycling plants were created that encouraged the public and traders to take them their trash, including garden waste and old construction materials. There, they were sorted, and vouchers were issued that gave those delivering their waste "free" compost or soil improver (the latter was actually dried and sterilised waste from sewage plants.) There must be scope for similar facilities here, and when the public is encouraged to use them - for something in return - the problem will eventually stop.
I wish I had the resources, or at least the influence, needed to make this work. Who would have thought a few years ago that it was possible to limit the numbers of plastic bags given away to shoppers? Let's see the same initiative being applied to plastic bottles! Too difficult to carry larger ones? No problem! Add something to the plastic mix that makes them a more valuable item to salvage - or do as one Scottish company has pioneered: Take rubber and plastic waste and crumble it into particles that can then be added to Asphalt for road surfacing. When the surface is worn out, it too can be recycled and incorporated into new Asphalt to resurface more roads.
The list of potential solutions is virtually endless when some thinking is applied.