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should have standards of taste and decorum?
I'm sure the photo of the man fishing is a nice photo that brings good memories to the family but I can see how allowing such a photo on his grave marker could lead to a strange trend toward macho sports tombstones -- photos of guys riding Harleys, laying up baskets, waterskiing, bowling, etc. Where would you have them draw the line? No hunting photos. presumably. But wait, fishing kills fish, doesn't it? What about the woman who likes to belly dance as a hobby? In the nude. Does she get her nudie-photo on her tombstone? What about the guy who wants his grave decorated with beer cans?
Personally, I'd allow people to decorate their loved ones' graves however they chose, no matter how tacky some of them might be. Not everyone would be that tolerant -- and there might be some people who'd do something so tasteless I'd object, too. Some people visit and tend family graves regularly, though, and would be quite upset by anything too out of the ordinary. It's like the rules in subdivisions that prohibit clotheslines and basketball hoops in view of the street; either silly or necessary, depending on who you ask.
In a cemetery belonging to a small community, the community may allow such individual expressions but I can see why cemeteries serving a larger, diverse population need more guidelines.
Most modern cemeteries seem to ban tombstones altogether in lieu of those tiny little stones with a brass nameplate, and they ban real flowers, force everyone to have a built-in vase, regularly filles with plastic flowers. Yuk.
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