It's a prank if no damage but the National Trust seem to think there has been so it is vandalism and anyone found to be involved should be prosecuted to the full extent the law allows.
The letters are painted hardboard, so not vandalism. It's all good fun. Let's not begrudge the Corbyn fans a few laughs at this stage. After Thursday they'l be sad and bitter for a minimum 5 years.
pranko
some civil servants have no sense of humour
just pick up the painted hardboards
monuments such as this need tending - you need to weed the white bits sort of so saying is being a bit precious
Does anyone remember the rag stunt of the teddy bear head being cut into a chalk hill outside Salisbury in 1968
just before the Idmiston turning
University college of north wales - rag stunt
people had a sense of humour then
The educated young men explained that it was necessary to get a chalk hill and choose one where the grass overlay only extended a few centimetres. High powered geological biological stuff !
The conservation charity was made aware of the incident on Monday morning and sent rangers out to remove the letters and assess the damage.
National Trust countryside manager Rob Rhodes said: "It is a time-consuming waste of our resources as a charity to repair the damage and clean up after such incidents when the money we are given could be spent instead on other conservation projects.
"As a Scheduled Ancient Monument, the giant has the highest archaeological protection and any damage from pegging down boards would be an offence
Vandalism, but since it is simply boards, pretty much a non-issue.
Compare that with the graffiti that seems tolerated these days, presumably because looking like a run down area is what some folk feel comfortable with.
the NT seems to be overreacting. I can't see any evidence of vandalism. Just pick up the letters, take them away, and auction them off for Tory party funds.