But like do tourists even have a community ? I don't think you are making sense here. Tourists are from everywhere, every one of them think the problem is the other tourists.
I really do wish people treat these places like their home. However, even people in my immediate circle, are just expecting other people to clean up for them when they're on vacation :). I don't know, something about traveling just turn on switch.
Especially with delivery services where a store will deliver your order to your door, you just keep accumulating more and more of those "reusable" bags. But the reality is that you really only need so many reusable bags, so when you keep getting more you have to do something with them
Bags should have a deposit and a "return excess bags for a refund" system like bottles do
Otherwise they are going to go to landfills, no question
Reusable shopping bags cost about $10-$15. No one is buying them frivolously.
I think the issue here is one of semantics. The so-called "reusable" bags you're talking about are still classified as single-use plastics.
If you look at BC as an example, where ALL single-use plastic bags at checkouts are banned, people have adapted just fine. In some stores (like restaurants) you can buy paper bags for 25¢, but generally people either don't bother with bags at all and simply load things directly into their cars, or they bring their own bags or baskets. Now, pretty much the only litter I regularly see is paper coffee cups or candy wrappers. Bags have disappeared, and bottles and cans usually collected for the deposit.
The reuseable bags in my area are 10-50 cents for the plastic ones and like 5 dollars for the foldable cloth ones with a button.
Where are you seeing 10-15 dollar bags? I can only imagine that’s happening because your locality added a major tax to them
Also I get delivery groceries from BJ’s and they have been including piles of these giant reuseable bags in each order to the point that I have been donating them to a homeless shelter.
I produced less plastic waste with grocery bags back when they were the size and shape to be reused as bathroom garbage bags, anecdata and real data all points to them being used frivolously still
Some people on this thread are talking about things like canvas bags, which are more expensive and meant to be reused a lot, and others are talking about plastic bags that have a lot of material and are more durable than the old school "thinnest bag you can produce without it dissolving immediately when you look at it" which are not nearly as expensive to buy as the others.
Going up a few levels in the conversation, I think the question is about the extra-durable bags the store sells for $0.15, not properly reusable bags (hence me calling out encouragement of properly reusable bags as a potential solution).
For videos media, you also have to factor in tone and pacing . Totally kill the flow of watching a video essay when a loud talking ads jump out for 5 second. That's why I have a kinder view for Youtube sponsors, since it's read by the literally same person making this video, and have total control when to place it. Even if it's NordVPN ads in a middle of a history channel.