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Salem, Massachusetts is awash -- dirty that is -- in tacky glitz. It ebbs and flows around the seasons, from a height (if you will) during Halloween (the entire month of October) and a low during the summer months of false witches, witchdom, and other cheap Hollywood glitz.
Salem does
not need more -- a statue of actress Elizabeth Montgomery as Samantha Stephens in "Bewitched" upon its city Green! All to hype a lame TV network entitled
"TVland" and coincidentally with yet another new Hollywood movie of misinformation and glitz. Shame on Salem! And shame on Mayor Stanley J. Usovicz, Jr. and the Salem City Council for allowing this tacky, tasteless, inappropriate 9-foot Hollywood and television
schlock to "enhance" the center of Salem.
Salem cannot continue to have, on the one hand, no industrial base to lower its unreasonably high real estate taxes, and on the other hand continue its "yellow brick road" to glitzy Hollywood schlock "witch" hype. One obviates the other. Hello? How stupid can these politicians of instant gratification get? This cheap schlock tourism will not contribute to lower Salem's already too high real estate taxes!
In addition, the glitz reduces the shine of Salem's rich colonial history. The tourism clashes. What wouldn't clash with gory pseudo-witches, bloody beheadings, and fake pirates?
Salem, Massachusetts should draw upon its rich and deep colonial history of glory. Salem was
the key seaport in America during the 1700s and 1800s of merchant sea captains! Privateers abounded during our American Revolutionary War from Salem, Massachusetts.
Salem Maritime, the first National Historic Site in the National Park System is along Salem's historic oceanfront. Americas first millionaires were home-grown in Salem. Some of their
homes still survive and are on the National Register. Row after row of colonial homes, offices, and stores are preserved for research, curiosity, and historical and architectural purposes. From the
Salem Athenaeum, the
House of Seven Gables,
Pioneer Village,
East India Marine Society (the names are familiar), to the Custom House on Derby Street overlooking the (what else?) the wharf where international trading ships were unloading awaiting colonial custom's tariffs, and the list goes on and on.
Further, there's a new
Peabody Essex Museum in Salem, Massachusetts dedicated to Salem's glorious sea merchants and sea-trade.
Whoa be it for Salem to continue to rely upon its tacky, schlocky, myopic Halloween-gory "witch" tourism. It can only continue to drive out profitable colonial tourism that would draw a wider real estate tax base, particularly since Salem's coal-fired electrical power plant is on the way out with its multi-million dollar real estate taxes paid to Salem. The plant is one of -- if not --
the sole remaining industry(ies) in Salem.
All of which reminds me of why I do not, would not, live in Salem. The Salem, Massachusetts of today -- unfortunately -- makes the cities of Danvers and Marblehead, Massachusetts, indeed, glad that they severed their regions (now separate cities) from Salem, Massachusetts years ago!
Disclaimer: The complained Halloween-type "witches" as portrayed in Salem's schlocky glitz of today are not those unfortunates accused of, and/or convicted of, being witches/wizards during the infamous
Salem Witch Trials of 1692, nor does the tourist-trap "witch" glitz have anything to do with the
http://www.religioustolerance.org/witchcra.htm">religion of wiccan.
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edited to add: Since the Salem Evening News changes its url contents on a daily basis the OP's url hyperlink does not bring up this matter. Therefore, I have pulled up an article in the online version of the UK_SundayHerald:
http://www.sundayherald.com/50359.