Well here's something that will be taken as an inflammatory comment, which I nevertheless believe with absolute certainty and will hold to despite the inevitable loss of karma/banning:
Anglosphere countries cannot be trusted with this level of access to another person's property. If the change gets through, people will abuse their rights, overstep, overstay, and leave a mess behind them; owners will complain bitterly, and some owner who has enough land or sway or title will complain strongly enough to the right person, and this will be dialled back. If you wait 50-70 years, it'll come back for another go.
I know Anglosphere mentality. I'm American, but have spent 21 years in Europe, living in Ireland, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, and travelling extensively in Scandinavia, Germany, and the UK. Folks differ in their attitudes toward collective responsibility and respect for others and their things. Not only that, but that's what's germane to this discussion.
Have you ever walked in British countryside? There is already limited right to roam and people are generally courteous about walking through people's property, shutting gates etc.
Walkers are one thing; it's when people stay overnight and can't be asked to pack away everything they hauled in that a layer really begins to accumulate: plastic wrappings, bottles, butts, wads of beshitted toilet paper, and so on. But I've witnessed enough hedge-rubbish in Snowdonia to not be blown away relative to what I saw in Switzerland and Norway.
Anglosphere countries cannot be trusted with this level of access to another person's property. If the change gets through, people will abuse their rights, overstep, overstay, and leave a mess behind them; owners will complain bitterly, and some owner who has enough land or sway or title will complain strongly enough to the right person, and this will be dialled back. If you wait 50-70 years, it'll come back for another go.
I know Anglosphere mentality. I'm American, but have spent 21 years in Europe, living in Ireland, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, and travelling extensively in Scandinavia, Germany, and the UK. Folks differ in their attitudes toward collective responsibility and respect for others and their things. Not only that, but that's what's germane to this discussion.