Chuck52-
<font color=blue>So does the government have a reasonable role to play in "making it easier"?</font color=blue>
Depends on the program and the individual's perspective.
Looking at the "bigger picture," it all boils down to what one thinks is "reasonable and necessary" with regards to "appropriate levels" of government participation (or "intrusion" as some would see it) in daily life.
Choose your poison - a.k.a. government program - to discuss with regards to if it is "reasonable" for the government "responsibility" to "make it easier." Depending on the "group" responding vs. the program being discussed, you'll get different responses as to it being "reasonable" or appropriate.
My comment wasn't directed at whether one should or should not participate in a recycling program - for the record, I'm not advocating nor am I bashing existing recycling programs on the whole. I'm sure some "make sense" while others "don't." My comment was really geared toward the "human nature" part of the discussion. If it's easy, and you're encouraged (by whatever pressure is being exerted on you), you're more likely to participate/take action.
Same type of thing with anything that is "free." Even if you don't need or even truly want something, if someone offers you something for free - no strings attached - you are far more likely to take it than not (how many goofy squeeze balls, mouse pads, or other "junk" have you gotten from some promotion, exhibit, etc. only to get home and say "Why the heck did I bring this home???")
<font color=blue>There are real concerns about the economic benefits of most recycling; if it's such a great idea, why aren't more people making money at it?</font color=blue>
That was actually the point I was making - that some folks (i.e. conservative types) are more inclined to think critically about this subject due to their suspicion of the radical elements associated with environmentalism where those who have no suspicions of such elements (i.e. liberal types) are less inclined to ask such questions on this subject since they don't question the motivations behind the message. (Notice I never used absolutes in these statements, just generalizations.)
This seems to go back to the whole question you stated initially - e.g. are "liberals" more inclined than "conservatives" to recycle. Perhaps - but, not because of the desire for waste, but suspicions/questions as to what the real benefits/drawbacks are. This being said, I still think the biggest factor is ease of participation.
<font color=blue>On the other hand, it's hard, for me at least, to not go with my gut feeling...</font color=blue>
I'm not saying your "gut" is "correct" or "incorrect" with regards to recycling, but I will say that not all things that seem "intuitive" lead one to the "correct" conclusion (e.g. some things are counterintuitive.) Without facts on the issue, one's "gut" is all one has - but facts trump "feelings."
<font color=blue>Should government step in, promote, and even support something like recycling when market forces aren't sufficient to drive the effort?</font color=blue>
Well, this is a loaded question (although I'm not questioning your motivation in asking it.) Suffice to say, again, talking "human nature" here, "it depends."
Some will say "yes" - others will say "no." All goes back to what one believes the "correct" (notice I didn't say "right") model of government is. Change the subject (replace "recycling" with "military") and you'll get an entirely different set of answers from the same folks.
I really just don't want to go in to the whole "Recycling is Good" vs. "Recycling is Evil" debate or what my personal beliefs on how much government should intrude/participate in this particular area. Suffice to say, if it is "reasonable & appropriate" based on the specific local situation (e.g. high landfill availability/low landfill availability, high cost for virgin production/low cost for virgin production, high energy/resource consumption for recycling activity/low energy/resource consumption for recycling activity, etc.) my view could change.