I was going to leave this thread alone, too, partially because I think tkip has been generous in modifying his original statements and accommodating other's opinions, so I see no need to attack or come on strong, even if I don't really agree. Largely, I think we live in a world where what is acceptable is constantly shifting - smoking is a good example of this - I recall seeing photos of meetings in the Ontario government circa 1972 with a big wonking ashtray in the middle of the table - a sight that is scarcely less jarring to our eyes than if one of the men around the table was completely naked . Our laws and our culture around smoking has shifted so dramatically and so definitively that it would be truly shocking for someone to light up in the house of another person without asking first. This is a good thing, it is a well mannered and sensible thing, and in 2010 we are immeasurably more polite, conscious of where we were in 1972, or 1985, or 1998. Same as with some of the other comments people have made about how we handle difference - minorities or gay people - there's no question we're ahead of the game, and that's primarily a moral issue, no?
It makes perfect sense to me that other habits might slide. James Howard Kunstler is quite amusing on this, his bile rising every time he sees a neck tattoo or a bank converted into a tattoo parlor. I'm still a bit unconvinced that we were cleaner in the past, partially because I don't find the city especially dirty now, and I recall the seventies when it really was acceptable, and done by most, to simply throw garbage around, especially in rural areas. My parents used to have a "dump" near our cottage where we'd just throw things we didn't need any more, everyone did it, nowadays that's actually pretty unthinkable for cottagers to do something like that. As for the city - hard to tell. In the absence of some real measure, and a measure that is balanced for the different levels of population that the city holds, I find it hard to tell.
It doesn't stop me from cringing at what some people do, and once in a while, getting this feeling that I need to get away from here. When I do, though, and I end up in other cities (like in England), it's sort of a relief to come back, I have to say.