It’s the pace of life coupled with a sense of entitlement, thinking bending rules is ok as it’s “not that bad”, and little fear of repercussions.
People are busy to take the time to walk to collect dc or too busy to park in the next street and walk round to the school gates. They are in a hurry. Possibly to get home to continue working from home. Busy busy busy. Rush rush rush. No time to smell the roses.
Society seems to encourage us to be individual to not be afraid to go for whatever we want. To strive to earn more and more money as that means success. Unfortunately to some that means do what you want to make life work for you even if it means bending the rules, as long as you don’t bend them too much that’s ok isn’t it, it’s not like we are committing a major crime is it...
Then there aren’t enough police or traffic wardens as governments and councils try to balance finances so people aren’t asked to pay even more tax. So crimes that should have financial consequences don’t get touched as the courts are full and the public servants that would previously have done the paperwork have either left and not been replaced or made redundant or because of increased workloads lumped into them there aren’t enough staff/isn’t enough time any more to do any of it.
The answer is more staff serving the public. More tax inspectors would recoup more money from catching tax evaders than their salaries cost. More parking wardens and police could also bring in more money in fines than their salary costs.
But it doesn’t happen as governments and newspapers tell us there are too many public servants stretching the public purse and downsize the services. The man on the street believes this and goes along with it. Successive politicians (not just one party) and council leaders don’t want to lose his vote so they agree.
This is just one example of the result.
Which I will probably get flamed for saying by the people who want to continue to break rules or who think I am having a go at a particular political party, which I am not.