Yes, but only on the roads/walkways and I find it very respectful to do so because I make a point of stopping and reading inscriptions, particularly of veterans. In many cases, I may be the only one who stops and reflects on these souls. I have even found distant relatives and I use the information I acquire through my runs to contribute to the database "Find A Grave". The desecration of memorials that I see is quite disheartening. In one cemetery along one of my running routes lies a WWII German army veteran. A common enlisted man. I suspect he was a POW (there were several camps near where I live) who decided to stay in the U.S. after the war. He had a German army bronze seal on his headstone, but that has been removed either by a vandal, metal thief, or wokester. The seal was removed during the time a couple of years ago when Confederate veteran memorials were being toppled. I often pass by in a municipal park another veteran memorial, this one to an 18-year-old sailor who was lost at sea during WWI. His memorial was once associated with a tree planting. The tree is long one, so his small bronze plaque sits by itself on a concrete base with the lawn mowers dancing around it. I took the time to research what happen to him. His loss was quite tragic. His ship first collided with another in fog and then the crippled ship was blown up by a German sea mine. He was blown overboard by the explosion and into burning oil on the surface of the water.