I'm sure x amount of people couldn't care less if the wand is there or not, but it's them I feel sorry for because they obviously never have seen SSE wandless... and that's where "the splendor of 'Epcot'" begins.
This is true, and it's also the thing about art and architecture--much of the impact of it is subtle, and not overtly noticed. That's what makes it classic versus ordinary, versus a good attempt.
For instance--how many people would really care if the Mona Lisa had a different expression on her face?
If, in American Gothic, there were no pitchfork?
How many people would care if the golden gate bridge were painted light blue?
Only the people who had seen it before and accepted it as a classic the way it was.
Changes to classic icons, no matter how subtle, should be avoided because often, what makes these works so striking and original are the small details.
I don't think the wand is a small detail, and I can understand how others might say it is insignificant in the grand scheme of things, but I return to my original point--you should not mess with classics. If you do, you should let the changes serve their purpose, and out of respect to the artist and the public, you should return it to its original state.
Fact: SSE's sphere is widely regarded as a major architectural achievement both in visual design and engineering--enough to be considered by a significant amount of people as "a classic".
Fact: The original vision and design for SSE did NOT include a wand.
It's not so much that most people don't care--it's that the artists, architects, designers, and engineers never envisioned the wand as part of their structure's statement. It cheapens their vision to keep it there, especially since their original vision was (and is) so widely lauded.
Argue all you want about the fact that it's sterile, boring, monolithic, or whatever--the point is that when you say this about the wandless SSE, you are now responding to the structure the original creators wanted you to respond to, not a re-tooled version--and that's a good thing.
Would my life change drastically if someone removed the pitchfork from American Gothic, added a different expression to the Mona Lisa, painted the Golden Gate bridge light blue, or added a giant neon sign to the Empire State building? Not at all. Would these still be an acts worthy of criticism, even scorn? You bet.
I didn't hate the wand when it was up for awhile, I just dislike that it's been up for so long that there are many many people who don't even recognize that they are looking at something that was not originally intended to be there.