NPS Rules: Covering Trump's Face on Your Park Pass Now Results in Invalidation
The National Park Service (NPS) has declared that covering Donald Trump's face on your park pass invalidates it. Learn why this policy is being enforced and its impact on visitors.
A simple sticker could lock you out of America's great outdoors. The National Park Service (NPS) has determined that covering Donald Trump's image on federal park passes renders them completely unusable.
The Consequences of NPS Park Pass Trump Face Alteration
As reported by Boing Boing, visitors who place stickers over the President's face on their passes are finding out the hard way that they've invalidated their annual access. The NPS views these passes as official government documents. Any physical modification, regardless of intent, is treated as a violation of the card's integrity.
Rangers at park entrances have been instructed to reject passes where the original design has been obscured. For those attempting to make a political statement, the cost is the price of a brand-new pass and a potential delay at the gate.
Public Infrastructure as a Political Battleground
This policy highlights how deeply political polarization has seeped into mundane administrative processes. While some argue that featuring a political figure's face on a service pass is a choice that invites friction, the federal government maintains that maintaining the card's official state is mandatory for entry.
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