Agree 100%. Public wanted "pretty" and "exotic" plants others didn't have years ago, when the push for oddball, non-native plants started. TOH was imported to the U.S. from Asia because it "looks tropical". Now TOH is a scourge across the country, outcompeting native trees & shrubs - and is the favorite food tree species for spotted lantern fly ....... another imported insect pest.
Everything can be brought back to poor management and regulations by government and industry going off the rails. I'm pushing landowners in NW/Northern MN to start looking at harvesting or shrinking their ash components due to EAB. Most of the management plans don't even mention it that were written 10 years ago because Minnesota thought they were safe with our cold...we will get EAB, and we will eventually get Mountain Pine Beetle. The natural barriers that have protected us are no longer there. The great plains have protected us from Mtn Pine Beetle, but guess what is to the north of the Midwest, the Canadian Shield, and it is all pine and spruce. MPB doesn't care it will take and will infect any pine if the conditions are right.
Russian Olive bad!! Kudzu BAD!! Blue Spruce bad, all of these are bad. And than we have our native pests like Larch Beetle, Mountain Pine Beetle, Hemlock Agylid, Two-Line Chestnut Borer, Elm Disease (same thing that is happening in urban environments now is what happened in the 40-50s with Elm), Diplodia, Heterobisium (once you got, forget about planting pines for about 80-100 years), White Pine Blister Rust...
the list goes on...and it keeps getting longer every year. The sad thing is a lot of landowners are told they can plant a specific tree or plant and before you know it, it becomes either invasive, or its a secondary host to a fungus that affects native trees and species, or drives already current pests on the landscape to become a problem....none of which is thought of.
So me being a forester and land manager, and looking back at data from the 50s to the 70s in MN and WI, and seeing those cycles repeat again, and the government, being government and not acting or downplaying as usual, I have to put in some form of a gameplay in my plans for landowners that is looking 10-20 years down the road. You have to.