SALT LAKE CITY (AP) – A bright monolith discovered in the depths of the Utah desert was striking, a mysterious beacon that promptly caught the eye of a world fighting a punitive pandemic that casts a veil during the holiday season.
Publicly revealed some time before Thanksgiving, he lured many others to a remote, red-rocked country to see and touch the construction of another global world that evoked sci-fi films and the state’s most prominent works of earth.
But the newcomers also flattened plants with their cars and left you human in the field without toilets. Now, two men known for their excessive sports in Utah’s vast outdoor landscapes say this kind of pain made them late at night. and demolish them.
Sylvan Christensen and Andy Lewis have many online subscribers for their articles on BASE jumping and slackline as a paratrooper, which is like walking on a tightrope. In videos posted on Instagram and YouTube, they said they were part of an organization that powered hollow stainless metal. plotted and took him in a wheelbarrow.
Christensen told the media Tuesday night that the flat was not ready for the influx and that its federal managers may simply not expect to keep up.
“Mystery was madness and we need to use this time to unite other people’s true disorders here – we lose our public lands – things like this don’t help,” he wrote.
He said the organization supported art and artists, but said it was an “ethical failure” to cut the rock to erect the monolith, and that the damage caused by “Internet sensationalism” was worse.
The organization’s action left many people disappointed who had traveled long distances to see the shiny silver structure, only to locate the void on one side of a triangular sheet of steel in a hole in the ground.
But the withdrawal probably wouldn’t have damaged the law. San Juan County Sheriff Jason Torgerson said Wednesday that they can’t investigate an asset theft case either because no one had come forward to claim the design as their own. The original author remains a mystery.
“The monolith was left on public property,” Torgerson said in an email to The Associated Press. Since it was placed there without permission in the first place, the original facility is also under investigation, he said.
A similar design that gave the impression last week in Romania also disguised the impression.