As far as I know, nobody ever questioned the Salem Witch Trails. The reason for this isprobably because, at the time of the Trials, mostly everybody believed in witches. The colonials believed that if someone got sick, it was because a witch was "bewitching" that person. Most Colonists would go to wits end to prevent an encounter with a witch or wizard. So when the witch trials began, naturally, all the colonists agreed to get rid of the "so called" witches immediately. If there was a person that didn't agree with the trials. Most likely that person would take care in hiding his\her feelings about it. Because, if you think about it, if so many believed in witches and so many wanted them dead and done with. What would happen to a person that told them that they should stop persecuting these men and women of being witches. I think the colonist would most likely think of that person as another witch, trying to stop the killings of his\her fellow minions. So as answer to your question. The person who criticized the Trials would probably be hanged, or served in jail for some time.
EDIT:
Solid reasoning, but incorrect.
Martha Corey, George Jacobs, John Proctor, Mary Easty, Sarah Goode, and George Burroughs never hid their objections and they can all be found on the lists of the executed.
Many of those who spoke out were imprisoned. That fact si often used to defend the theory that the girls' were covering something up or getting revenge. They took down any oppostionto protect themselves.
they were hanged and left in ditches and creeks
They would ened up being accused
what happened was the people fought to keep there place in the party
They'd get beat or killed possiblyBeaten, imprisoned, killed.
they suffocated and died
so that people would be able to know what happened.
People wore paperclips on their collars during the Holocaust as a show that they were against Nazis, and antisemitism. They were worn as a way to support the Jewish people.
Scaring people into taking drastic action against innocent people.
Yes
people die
July 14, 1789 is Bastille day in France. on that day the people of Paris tore down the Bastille castle. That castle had served as a prison where the king had locked up his enemies and held them for secret trial and executed them. The people may have never have know either the charges against them nor their accusers. Their families may never have known what happened to them. The mob rushed the castle and overthrew the old order. The French Revolution had begun. The day of kings with absolute power had begun.
people die
People got evacuated
what happened was the people fought to keep there place in the party
I'm going to answer this under the assumation that you are asking why the people named as witches were named. No one knows exactly why. If the afflicted accusers were aware of who they were choosing as witches, the accused were most lilkey easy targets whose accusations wouldn't be challenged in the beginning and, after the gained influence and credibility, people who refused to believe the accusers were called out. If the accusers were under the influence of a physical or mental illness, there is no way to map the accusations.
people died
there was destruction and many people deid
They got killed
People panicked about the spreading of communism.