Paradox
New member
- Joined
- May 29, 2006
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I gotta say I'm with Chomp with this one. The memorials on the mountain are just not right. Did the departed live on that spot, own it at one time, or make it possible for all of us to enjoy or use it? The answer in most cases is no.chomp said:I disagree with you guys who think that reporting the plaque was over the top. I think that making a plaque and mounting on a prominent peak in the whites without asking anyone is a pretty entitled thing to do. To do something like this is to assume that the mountain is yours and that you are so important that you don't have to check with anyone. I see no problem with contacting the USFS and informing them that someone littered on the mountain.
Just because its a memorial to someone who died doesn't make this any less of of a littering offense. But you can count me among the group of people that fights to remove all those roadside crosses, so I am probably in the minority on this issue. Yes, Im sorry that someone died in an accident, but I don't need to see white crosses and wilting flowers on a public road every half mile. Leaving your personal message on a mountain is wrong, and it should be removed as soon a possible. Just because the personal message in this case is about an unfortunate loss of life doesn't change that view for me.
Suppose my wife (you do not know her) liked the look of your house, then she died. Two weeks later I use a large amount of epoxy resin to glue a nice, professionally done, bronze plaque onto your front stoop. The height of arrogance on my part, but I can come up with all kinds of platitudes that could make lots of people feel bad or guilty about it. Why are mountain memorials any different?