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Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Lashinger and Penn National: Greed trumps Respect

The Casino Vultures salivating to prey on Holyoke would also hope to desecrate Gettysburg to confirm that greed trumps respect and common sense.


If those Casino Vultures would so easily insult the national character for self-enrichment, what hope Holyoke?


Veterans Unite to Prevent a Casino at Gettysburg

Veterans are again riding to the sound of the guns—to prevent the sound of slot machines echoing across the battlefield at Gettysburg.

For months, historians, preservationists and others have been fighting the proposed construction of a gambling casino near the hallowed ground where the largest battle of the Civil War was fought and President Abraham Lincoln delivered one of the most memorable speeches in America’s history. Author and journalist John A. Farrell added his voice in a U.S. News & World Reports opinion piece.

Now a group of American veterans has formed to join the fight against the Gettysburg casino. See the media release below from the Civil War Preservation Trust. The president of the CWPT, James Lighthizer, is a member of Armchair General’s advisory board.

A similar attempt to build a casino at Gettysburg was defeated in 2005.

Click here to watch a video in which Ken Burns, David McCullough, Sam Watterson, Matthew Broderick, Medal of Honor recipient Paul W. Bucha and others make appeals to prevent the casino from being built at Gettysburg.

To view a map showing the proposed location of the Gettysburg casino, click here.

MEDIA RELEASE
(Harrisburg, Pa.) – At a press conference September 21st in the rotunda of the Pennsylvania capital, leading American veterans opposed to a proposal to build a casino near some of America’s most hallowed ground announced the formation of Veterans for Gettysburg. James Lighthizer, president of the Civil War Preservation Trust (CWPT), issued the following statement in support of the new effort:

“Gettysburg holds a special place in the hearts of all Americans, but it is particularly dear to those who have felt the heat of battle. The call to military service is a tie that stretches across the generations and makes all of our nation’s veterans truly one ‘band of brothers.’

“The soldiers who fought our Civil War — the veterans who helped establish the Gettysburg Battlefield as we know it today, erecting profound monuments to their fallen comrades and returning time and again to reflect on the meaning of that hallowed ground — are no longer with us, leaving it to our generation to remember their sacrifices and, when necessary, speak on their behalf. And who better to take up the standard of respect and decency in their name but those who also know what it means to serve their country in uniform.

“Today in Harrisburg, some of our country’s leading former servicemen joined together under the banner of Veterans for Gettysburg and announced an open letter from America’s veterans to the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board. In asking that this inappropriate proposal be rejected, they write: ‘As you would honor our service, we ask that you remember theirs.’

“I commend these brave men and women for answering the call to defend Gettysburg, just as they answered the call to protect their nation. Further, I encourage all members of the Civil War Preservation Trust and all those who respect America’s past who served in the armed services to join the effort. Military veterans — regardless of era or branch of service — are
invited to sign the open letter by visiting www.ipetitions.com/petition/veteransforgettysburg."

With 55,000 members, CWPT is the largest nonprofit battlefield preservation organization in the United States. Its mission is to preserve our nation’s remaining Civil War battlefields and to promote appreciation of these hallowed grounds through education and heritage tourism. Since 1987, the organization has helped save more than 29,000 acres of battlefield land in 20 states, including 700 at Gettysburg. The CWPT website is located at www.civilwar.org
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Don’t Build a Casino at Gettysburg
By John Aloysius Farrell

Filmmaker Ken Burns, author David McCullough, and actors Sam Waterston and Matthew Broderick joined Medal of Honor recipient Paul Bucha in a 10-minute protest film that was played by Gettysburg preservationists this morning, as the Pennsylvania Gaming Control Board opened hearings on whether the state should grant a license for a casino at the historic Civil War battlefield.

Hundreds of individuals and dozens of community groups waiting to speak were treated to the cinematic presentation by Susan Star Paddock, the chair of the grassroots group, No Casino Gettysburg.

"People wonder how a small-town nonprofit could persuade celebrities to appear free," she said. "These … individuals were simply asked. It is Gettysburg itself, and the reverence America feels for this hallowed ground that persuaded them to join our cause."

It is the second attempt for local developer David LeVan, whose initial venture was defeated by a coalition of activists in 2006. He wants to run his gambling resort at the site of the current Eisenhower Inn, a few hundred yards from Gettysburg National Military Park. (Which is misleading, since battlefield boundaries are drawn very narrowly, and generally don't include all the sites of encampments, field hospitals, and fighting.) The American Legion calls the idea "a national disgrace," and it is opposed by hundreds of historians, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and my pals at the Civil War Preservation Trust, who alerted me to the controversy.

Surely, even in these
tough economic times, Pennsylvania will recognize that glitzy commercial development on the battlefield's borders can spoil the character of the town and the battleground which, in its carefully preserved condition, lures thousands of tourists to Gettysburg. Do the people of south central Pennsylvania want to kill the goose that lays golden eggs? For a few hundred busboy, waitress, and croupier jobs?

And though I'm sure that the soldiers who fought and died at Gettysburg knew their way around a deck of cards, I cannot imagine, after seeing their comrades slaughtered in the Wheat Field, or charging up Cemetery Ridge, that they'd want the neon and clang, and the legalized thievery of a casino, on the grounds on which they marched and fought and died that day.

Build it in Harrisburg. Or York.


Here's a report that well worth reading --

Comparative Analysis of Mason-Dixon’s Local Impact Report
Posted on 08 May 2010 by getty

Mason-Dixon’s Local Impact Report [LIR] proves their proposed casino is a “locals” casino that will take more from Adams County than it returns. This is a significant change from Crossroads’ 2006 proposal. In that proposal, Crossroads claimed that Adams would provide 17% of the casino’s revenue – 6% from residents and 11% from existing overnight hotel guests. At the time, we debated Crossroad’s projection for Adams as too low.

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