Very strange talk from the townsfolk there. They're real eager to get those stones rebuilt. There's no way in hell it would be feasible given how much it would cost
Makes me wonder if this isn't a town full of Luciferian kooks that endorse the sick message on those things.
I mean that's what I was thinking but how much revenue could they have possibly brought in? They were relatively obscure outside of conspiracy circles. And it (was) on public land, so I don't even think there was a gift shop.
Maybe it's like that gag in Married with Children where the town's serial killer was also the man that met Andy Griffith. "This town's got two things to our name: a serial killer and the man that met Andy Griffith! We can't afford to lose 'em both!"
Idk I'm glad they're gone and I hope it stays that way.
I kinda have the feeling that there's a faction that just wants the stones gone. Really, there was no reason to demolish the stones that were still standing. They appeared basically unscathed, as far as I could tell from photos. I highly doubt they would have fallen over. The weight alone should have kept them erect, along with the remaining weight of the capstone. It would have been easy enough to erect a temporary fence around the area until equipment could be brought in to take them down in a similar fashion as to how they were erected. However, they seemed to be in an awful hurry just to knock them over and get them out of there.
The article says they gave the pieces back to the granite company that built it. This may be "code" for, "Here are the pieces. Now go memory hole them somewhere until people forget about them." Wanna bet the granite company uses the pieces to make something else out of them? Time will tell, I guess.
Very strange talk from the townsfolk there. They're real eager to get those stones rebuilt. There's no way in hell it would be feasible given how much it would cost
Makes me wonder if this isn't a town full of Luciferian kooks that endorse the sick message on those things.
More likely they're missing the revenue that the tourists brought in. As I understand it, the Guidestones and the town were/are off the beaten track.
I mean that's what I was thinking but how much revenue could they have possibly brought in? They were relatively obscure outside of conspiracy circles. And it (was) on public land, so I don't even think there was a gift shop.
Maybe it's like that gag in Married with Children where the town's serial killer was also the man that met Andy Griffith. "This town's got two things to our name: a serial killer and the man that met Andy Griffith! We can't afford to lose 'em both!"
Idk I'm glad they're gone and I hope it stays that way.
I kinda have the feeling that there's a faction that just wants the stones gone. Really, there was no reason to demolish the stones that were still standing. They appeared basically unscathed, as far as I could tell from photos. I highly doubt they would have fallen over. The weight alone should have kept them erect, along with the remaining weight of the capstone. It would have been easy enough to erect a temporary fence around the area until equipment could be brought in to take them down in a similar fashion as to how they were erected. However, they seemed to be in an awful hurry just to knock them over and get them out of there.
The article says they gave the pieces back to the granite company that built it. This may be "code" for, "Here are the pieces. Now go memory hole them somewhere until people forget about them." Wanna bet the granite company uses the pieces to make something else out of them? Time will tell, I guess.
Some moonbat will probably make a countertop out of them