That's a fair and reasonable question. In fact, my suggestion is in the very next sentence.
hikerbrian said:
On that note, can someone please start circulating an appropriate photo with the meme, "Every time you leave your used TP on the side of the trail, God kills a kitten"? TIA!
Since I never used to see TP on the trail, my hypothesis is that said TP comes from the new generation of hikers. I think that's the FB crowd, young and old. One way to impact the FB crowd is to circulate memes that appear glib, but actually impact people's behavior. Pooping in the woods is not something people talk about much. (Unless you're a parent with young children. Then you talk about it ALL the time. Alas, I digress.) Anyway, if the next time someone in your group stops for an 'extended bio break' you remark, "Remember, every time you leave your used TP on the side of the trail, God kills a kitten!" then it's a funny ice breaker rather than an awkward scolding, the person is unlikely to leave their used TP on the side of the trail, and they've got a funny meme to pass on to the next person.
Maybe it won't work. I don't know. But laws around littering are already on the books and people know about them, especially in NH, as there are numerous signs right along the highway. I don't think having people sign a pledge is going to do much to change their behavior. It's just an annoying intrusion for those of us who already follow the letter of the law, and often do better than that.
In other countries, I can imagine a different problem: not all people in positions of authority are as reasonable as we might hope. Leave No Trace is ambiguous (did I leave a trace by peeing on the side of the trail? Should I have done it on a rock and not some grass? What about eating some berries?), and signing your name to a document that says you won't do a thing that is not perfectly defined is, in my opinion, bad practice.
My personal philosophy is that, in general, keeping the intruding hand of government and regulations at bay is best if similar or better outcomes can be achieved another way. Reasonable people could disagree with that philosophy; I don't have a problem with that. I don't live in NH now, but there's definitely a Live Free or Die exon in my DNA somewhere. In fact, living in Taxachusetts has me at times longing ever more for the land of my birth.