>>2658788>where there's no chance for anyone to ever enforce the dumb shit they're putting on the signThey can technically enforce cairn prohibitions, which are implemented in almost any major state or federal park.
They're not going to in most places, nor are they likely to catch you, so for all intents and purposes it might as well be a "don't do it because I said so," making it even worse.
Certain places, like on mountains, it makes sense that they would (and do try to) discourage and punish stackers, since they do introduce actual hazards.
Telling me "think of the poor buggos :c" without any additional context is incredibly stupid, though.
What special bug lives in buttfuck Virginia that they're trying to protect?
Is the manufacturing process used for this synthetic sign somehow less harmful than stacked rocks?
Should we be removing dead branches from every tree in the park to gently set them on the ground, lest they hurt these unnamed rare bugs?
Are the bugs more important and rocks more dangerous than any creature that might nibble on the sign?
What do we do about the sharp metal base that is left when the wind rips that synthetic plea off and casts it into the water supply? New sign #leavenotrace? Trash the metal? Leave it sticking up to fuck up a deer just for the giggles?
I'm so irrationally upset at this sign. I need to go stack some rocks to cool off.