NEW for 4/29: Russia’s mental state; Georgia’s hate groups

GwinnettForum  |  Number 21.32  |  April 29, 2022

BRASELTON AWARD: The Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation recently presented the Michael L. Starr Award to the developers of the Braselton Cotton Gin in downtown Braselton. The Atlanta Development Company, Architectural Collaborative and Contractor David Shepard received the award, presented to a project that best exemplifies the highest standards of historic rehabilitation and has a significant impact on the downtown of the city in which it is located. Town Manager Jennifer Scott says that “This rehabilitation project revived a place that was once an important agricultural building. As the Braselton Brewing Company, it is once again a focal point of downtown.” The Cotton Gin was constructed by the Braselton family around 1900 and is a significant example of early 20th century cotton gin structures: two stories with a side-gable metal roof, metal exterior siding, covered wagon entry and wrap-around porch.

IN THIS EDITION

TODAY’S FOCUS: Considering the national mentality of the Russian state
EEB PERSPECTIVE: Southern group lists Norcross church as among “Hate Groups”
SPOTLIGHT: Peach State Federal Credit Union
FEEDBACK: Gives views on new “Constitutional Carry” law in Georgia
UPCOMING: Gateway85 seeks zero emissions in landscape equipment
NOTABLE: Gwinnett Place redevelopment concepts now open for study
OBITUARIES: Mike Corkum
GEORGIA TIDBIT: Hanging of Georgia woman in 1873 had vast impact on state
MYSTERY PHOTO: Indoor scene has big clues staring you in the face
LAGNIAPPE: You can get instant acceptance at Georgia Gwinnett College
CALENDAR: Art comes to the Chattahoochee River at Jones Bridge Park on April 30 

TODAY’S FOCUS

Considering the national mentality of the Russian state

By Jim Cofer
Associate director (retired), Georgia Tech Research Institute

SNELLVILLE, Ga.  |  Many Americans are appalled to see Vladimir Putin’s home popularity reaching numbers as high as 80 percent while Ukrainians are being slaughtered daily. For 70 years after deposing the Czar, the Russian Communists provided the people with minimal but adequate food, housing, and jobs, but not representative government or a free press.  

Cofer

In 1988, Mikhail Gorbachev instituted “Perestroika” (reform) and “Glasnost” (openness) in attempts to elevate the plight of the Russian people to western standards.

 As the Soviet empire collapsed, it became clear that an emergency situation was dangerously close. A total of 30,000 nuclear weapons and a vast weapons production complex were spread over four sovereign states. Some 40,000 tons of chemical weapons and a large biological capability were also present. In response, the United States devised a program to consolidate, secure, and eliminate materials and infrastructure in the 15 states that evolved in the former Soviet territory.

In 1991, Senators Sam Nunn (D-Ga.) and Richard Lugar (R-In.) collaborated and gained passage of the Soviet Threat Reduction Act. The Department of Defense’s Cooperative Threat Reduction (CTR) program, known as the Nunn-Lugar Program, was created for the purpose of securing and dismantling weapons of mass destruction and their associated infrastructure in the former states of the Soviet Union. The June 1992 “Umbrella Agreement” signed by presidents George H. W. Bush and Boris Yeltsin authorized CTR programs between the United States and Russia.

Some progress was made early on, but we Americans never fully appreciated the damage done to the Russian psyche by the loss of the Cold War with America or by our attempts to redirect them away from what they do best—missile system development. As a former analyst of these weapons, I found them to be highly effective and much cheaper than our own. I toured Russia in 1994 along with other U.S. defense contractors, and on more than one occasion, heard the complaint that “we used to be one of the two most powerful and respected nations on earth, but now we are a third world country begging for handouts.”  

Jobs were scarce, salaries were low, officials were corrupt, and only the ruthless Russian Mafia offered any stability.

My wife and I visited Russia again in 2016 and found quite a difference in outlook, especially among the young. A thriving private sector had emerged, Russia was selling oil and advanced weapons systems to our enemies, and their military was regaining respect. 

We are seeing a resurgence in Russian National Self Esteem in the ‘old school KGB’ Putin. Sadly, it is not likely to go away soon.

EEB PERSPECTIVE

Southern group lists Norcross church among “hate groups”

By Elliott Brack
Editor and Publisher, GwinnettForum

APRIL 29, 2022  |  Since its funding in 1971, the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) of Montgomery, Ala. has stood up for the powerless, the exploited  and victims of discrimination and hate. It has won legal landmarks that have brought systemic reforms to the Deep South. 

SPLC regularly monitors hate groups and other extremists throughout the country, to expose their activities to the public. It is currently tracking 1,600 of these groups. Its 2021 publication, The Year in Hate and Extremism, recently was released. It lists 733 hate groups, of which 34 are in Georgia. Shockingly, we found one in Norcross, the Strong Hold Baptist Church at 5865 Jimmy Carter Blvd. in Norcross.

The website for that church, founded in 2018, surprisingly says that it is not part of a denomination, but is an independent fundamental King James Bible-believing “Baptist” church.   We take that to  mean that it believes in the Baptist tradition, though the church is not part of any association of Baptist churches.

The pastor of the church is David Berzins, who was raised on the south side of Chicago. He was ordained at Faithful Word Baptist Church in Tempe, Arizona, in 2013. He served four years in Prescott Valley, Ariz.  The church webpage says that he “saw a great need for a new church plant in the Atlanta area.” Berzins moved his family across the country to found Strong Hold Baptist Church in Norcross. The first service was held on June 24, 2018, with 53 people in attendance. Easter Sunday 2022, the church had 120 at its service. 

The Rev. Berzins told GwinnettForum that “he puts no stock in what the SPLC has to say.  They are an extremely liberal, far-left mouthpiece.” He said the church has been listed on the SPLC site since 2019, after a WSB news story aired the church’s views, particularly on homosexuality, when it was first meeting at Lucky Shoals Park.  

The SPLC lists Strong Hold Church among 65 anti-LGBTQ organizations in the nation, as a group portraying LGBTQ people as “ threats to children, society and often public health.”

Strong Hold Church’s pastor says he believes homosexuality should be a crime, and also believes that adultery, kidnapping and rape are crimes.  “We do not cherry-pick what we don’t like.”

Here are other hate groups that the SPLC list in its publication for Georgia.

  • Neo-Nazi: American Nazi Party of Georgia.
  • White Nationalist (3): Affirmed Right, Atlanta; American Patriots USA of Dahlonega; and Patriot Front of Georgia.
  • Christian Identity: Covenant People’s Ministry, Brooks, Ga. 
  • Neo Confederate: League of the South, Georgia.
  • Neo-Volkisch: Asatru Folk Assembly, Georgia.
  • Anti-Immigrant: The Dustin Inman Society, Marietta.
  • Anti-LGBTQ (2) : American Vision, Powder Springs; and Strong Hold Baptist Church, Norcross.
  • Antisemitism (2): Nation of Islam: Atlanta and Brunswick.
  • General Hate (11): Great Milestone, Atlanta and Valdosta; House of Israel, Atlanta; Indigenous Sovereigns, Atlanta; Israel United in Christ: Riverdale and Savannah; Universal Practical Knowledge, Atlanta; Luxor Couture, Atlanta; New Black Panther Party, Atlanta; Sicaril 1715,  Atlanta; and Eyes on Egypt, Lithonia.
  • Militia (3): Georgia Three Percent Martyrs: Bremen; 111 Percent Security Force, Georgia; and 111 Percent United Patriots of Georgia. 
  • Sovereign Citizens (4): The Assembly, Lithonia; Corporate Freedom Group, Atlanta; The Moorish Science Temple of America 1928, Lithonia; and Sovereign Filing Solutions, Morrow.
  • Conspiracy Propagandists: John Birch Society, Barnesville. 
  • Antigovernmental General (3): Constitution Party, Woodstock; Oath Keepers, Georgia; and The Patriot Depot, Powder Springs. 

SPLC list no Georgia organizations for other categories it includes in its 2022 report: Ku Klux Klan; Racist Skinheads; Anti-Muslim; and Constitutional Sheriffs. 

Coming Tuesday

Look at candidate answers and GwinnettForum endorsements in the Tuesday, May 3, edition of the Forum.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

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FEEDBACK

Gives views on new “Constitutional Carry” law in Georgia

Editor, the Forum: 

Recently read the article concerning “Constitutional carry” in Georgia. Though well written and thought out, there are quite a few things not included. 

“Constitutional carry” does not allow just anyone to purchase a firearm. It allows people to defend themselves from those that do not care about the law. In the past, an individual would have to go the magistrate’s office, pay a fee and fill out a form then go to their local sheriff’s office to be fingerprinted. This also incurs a fee. 

Then a background check is conducted and if everything checks out, you receive your permit. Then you may purchase a firearm. Without a permit, when you go to purchase a firearm there are more steps. You must fill out a form at the dealer, then a National Crime Information Center(NCIC) background check is conducted. One of three things will happen: 1.) Good to go. You can buy a gun. 2.) Check hold: you must wait three days for the NCIC check to be completed. Or 3.) the permit is denied. 

By law, “Constitutional carry” only allows persons that are legally allowed to own a firearm to do so. Your deranged person will buy one off of the street (probably stolen) or steal one themselves. No law written will stop a criminal from committing a crime: they are just words. If you do not respect the law, then the law means nothing.

– Woody Luttrell, Dublin, Ga.

Dear Woody: Thanks for explaining. To our way of thinking, “Constitutional carry” means nothing more than more guns around, which is a shame. Yes, we are no NRA member.– –eeb

Learned from Forum that she is no longer in 4th District

Editor, the Forum: 

I appreciated the updated Congressional map in the last issue. We have not received a notice that our district had changed, as we did at the last redistricting after the 2010 census. Glad we saw the new information before we showed up at the polls next week.

– Kathy Lobe’, Lilburn

Send us your thoughts:  We encourage you to send us your letters and thoughts on issues raised in GwinnettForum.  Please limit comments to 300 words, and include your hometown.  The views of letters are the opinion of the contributor. We reserve the right to edit for clarity and length.  Send feedback and letters to:  elliott@brack.net.

UPCOMING

Gateway85 seeks zero emissions in landscape equipment

In celebration of Earth Day, Gateway85 Community Improvement District announces that is working with Brightview (NYSE: BV), the nation’s leading commercial landscape company, to move to zero-emission, low-noise electric landscaping equipment beginning with mowers. It is Gateway85’s goal to move to 100 percent zero-emission electric landscape equipment to reduce gas emissions and noise pollution.

Emory Morsberger, executive director – Gateway85 CID, says: “As one of the state’s largest Community Improvement Districts, Gateway85 CID felt obligated to lead the way in finding environmentally sustainable solutions for the district. We are pleased to be working with an industry leader like Brightview.”

Gateway85 CID has currently implemented 50 percent of its mowing equipment as electric, and all two-stroke engines, including weed eaters, blowers and hedgers are electric. The goal is to be 100 percent electric by the end of 2023.

Brightview prides itself on developing and nurturing landscapes that inspire and enhance communities and deploying environmentally sustainable strategies. Solutions are the keystone to what Brightview does on Earth Day and every day.

Brightview has implemented an enterprise-wide environmental, social, and governance (ESG) strategy and as outlined in its 2022 ESG Report, the company is committed to minimizing its impact on earth. The company has a goal to reduce carbon emissions by 90 percent and become carbon neutral by 2035.

Young to be first speaker for Gas South District series 

Young

Former United Nations Ambassador Andrew Young will be the first speaker in a series sponsored by Gas South District. He will speak May 12 at 11:30 a.m.  The purpose of the series is to bring distinguished leaders to Gwinnett County to discuss current events, trends, and ideas that enrich lives and create conversation for the future of our community. The Series is presented by Northside Hospital.  

Appointed as an Ambassador to the United Nations in 1977, Young negotiated an end to white minorityrule in Namibia and Zimbabwe and brought President Jimmy Carter’s emphasis on human rights to international diplomacy efforts. Later, as two-term Mayor of Atlanta, Young brought in over 1,100 businesses, over $70 billion in foreign direct investments and generated over a million jobs. Individual tickets and table purchases are available by visiting www.GasSouthDistrict.com/speaker-series-1

NOTABLE

Gwinnett Place redevelopment concepts now open for study

Three organizations are working together to chart a redevelopment action plan for the Gwinnett Place area.  Gwinnett County, the Atlanta Regional Commission (ARC) and the Gwinnett Place Community Improvement District (CID) are together pulling together a plan to make the mall area a vibrant community and destination that reflects Gwinnett Place’s international character and embraces the diverse backgrounds of its businesses and residents. 

With Gwinnett County’s purchase of part of the site in 2021, Gwinnett now has an opportunity to shape a shared community vision for the future of Gwinnett’s central business district. 

During last week’s three-day revitalization design workshop, leaders in mall redevelopment came together to develop two initial redevelopment concepts that combine the community’s vision for the site with market realities. 

Concept 1 is for a mixed-use town center, focusing on lower density with small local retail around the proposed central green. The development focus will be primarily residential, averaging three to four stories in height. There would be less public investment with a slower pace of redevelopment. This concept would be like what many of Gwinnett’s successful downtowns offer today.

Concept 2 is a cultural district that embraces the diversity and the international character already around Gwinnett Place. This concept would require higher public investment, but the redevelopment impact would increase, and the pace of development would be faster. It would include the construction of an iconic cultural center with classrooms, an international library, language lab, office space for nonprofits, along with an entrepreneur incubator space. 

The central green would come alive with arts, cultural events, an amphitheater and water features. Structured parking would free acres of surface parking for additional green space, trails, bike paths and buildings would be four to six stories high. 

The success of any future redeveloped mall site must be tied to how well the community’s wishes to respond to the opportunities, and the challenges, of the real estate market. Any future redevelopment options must be data-driven, market supportable and economically feasible. Looking 10, 15 and 20 years into the future, the consultant team prepared real estate demand models for key land uses such as housing, workplace/office, hospitality and retail. 

Visit the concepts to let Gwinnett Place officials  know your thoughts and comments.  Go to  www.GwinnettPlaceToBe.com to view the concepts and offer improvement suggestions. The consultant team will then begin detailed work on a final strategy which will be completed by September and presented to Gwinnett County leadership for implementation.

Sugarloaf CID elects new board member, re-elects 2 others

Sugarloaf Community Improvement District has elected a new board member, and re-elected two others.

Souza

The new director is Robson Souza, general manager of Sugarloaf Mills, which is part of the Simon Property Group. Robson oversees day-to-day operations of the super-regional shopping center and is responsible for its leasing, marketing, finance, building operations, peripheral development, and community relations. Prior to this position, he worked at some of Simon’s assets in the South Florida and Dallas markets. He is a graduate of Florida Atlantic University with a degree in finance. He has lived in Gwinnett since 2018.

The board of Sugarloaf CID also re-elected Brand Morgan and Cole Hudgens as directors.

Goff is new director of northeast Realtors

Goff

The Northeast Atlanta Metro Association of Realtors has a new association executive. She is Janét Goff, who has been involved in the real estate world for more than 20 years.  She previously served as director of the Capitus Real Estate Learning Center.  She has been involved in the real estate industry for the past twenty plus years. Established in 1969, The Northeast Atlanta Metro Association of Realtors promotes professionalism and ethical real estate practices. It is one of the largest Realtor associations in Metro Atlanta. For more information, call 770-495-7300 or visit www.NAMAR.org

OBITUARIES

Michael Albert Gale Corkum

Michael Corkum, age 75, of Peachtree Corners, formerly of LaHave, Nova Scotia, passed away peacefully at his home surrounded by family on April 14, 2022.

Corkum

Mike was born on August 19, 1946 in Nova Scotia, Canada. He graduated from Acadia University and began a long career in banking in both Canada and the United States. He retired from CIBC in 2004 after a 37 year career. 

Mike was a member of Christ Church Episcopal in Norcross, where he sang in the choir and served 29 years as thrift shop treasurer. He also served as treasurer for Rainbow Village where he actively volunteered. Mike loved golf, music, playing the piano, and being near the water in Nova Scotia.

Mike was full of joy and had a tremendous impact on everyone he met. He will be remembered for his strong work ethic, unwavering honesty and integrity, gentle nature, welcoming smile and infectious laugh. He was a true steward of the Lord, not just professing his faith but living it. He always led by example, and never hesitated to give all that he had to help his fellow man. Mike leaves a legacy of love having touched many lives with his kind heart and generous spirit.

He is preceded in death by his parents, Lloyd and Daisy Corkum, and his sister, Carol Ann.  He is survived by his loving wife of 54 years, Pat (Harlow) Corkum, daughters Kim Hartwig and husband Tom, Shannon Snyder and husband Jason, grandchildren Mackenzie and Hunter Snyder and Kacey and Sadie Hartwig, sister Ellen Warren and husband Darrell, and many treasured nieces, nephews, family and friends.

A celebration of life will be held at Christ Church Episcopal on April 30 at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations in Mike’s honor may be made to Rainbow Village (www.rainbowvillage.org) or Christ Church Episcopal (www.ccnorcross.org). 

RECOMMENDED

Send us your recommendations

An invitation: What books, restaurants, movies or web sites have you enjoyed recently? Send us your recent selection, along with a short paragraph (150 words) as to why you liked this, plus what you plan to visit or read next.  Send to: elliott@brack.net 

GEORGIA TIDBIT

Hanging of Georgia woman in 1873 had vast impact on state

In 1873 Susan Eberhart was convicted of murder and hanged in Preston. Her execution was among the most publicized and controversial in the state’s history and had a significant influence on the administration of capital punishment in Georgia. 

In 1871, 18-year-old Susan Eberhart found employment as a servant for Enoch F. Spann, a 36-year-old Confederate veteran, and his wife, Sarah, a disabled woman in her 50s. Enoch Spann made sexual advances toward Eberhart soon after her arrival and began plotting to murder his wife in hopes that he might marry Eberhart. Spann first arranged for his wife to be thrown from their buggy into a swollen stream while traveling to church, but Eberhart intervened and saved her from drowning. 

According to rumor, Enoch then considered drowning his wife in a water barrel but never acted upon this plan. In May 1872 neighbors discovered Sarah Spann’s strangled body at the family’s home; Enoch Spann and Eberhart were nowhere to be found. 

Governor James M. Smith offered a $500 reward for their capture, and a posse set out to locate the fugitives. A week later, the party found Spann and Eberhart in Alabama and returned the pair to Webster County to face trial. Members of the posse later testified that both fugitives admitted guilt, but the reward money may have motivated the ascription of blame. 

The Superior Court of Webster County found Spann and Eberhart guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced both to death by hanging. According to Enoch’s confession, he strangled his wife with a rope. Jurors debated whether Eberhart was an enthusiastic participant or a coerced victim, but ultimately concluded that Eberhart was guilty, having placed a handkerchief over the victim’s mouth to muffle her screams.

Spann later appealed his conviction on grounds of insanity, but a Webster County jury determined he had been fit to stand trial. Two unsuccessful appeals to the state supreme court followed, and on April 11, 1873, he was hanged on the gallows at “Bugger Bottom” in Preston. A carnival-like atmosphere prevailed as some 4,000 onlookers converged on Preston for the hanging. 

Though her conviction also carried the death penalty, jurors urged the court to show Eberhart mercy based on their belief she had fallen under the malevolent influence of an older man. Lower courts disregarded that recommendation, however, and when Eberhart’s appeal reached the state supreme court, Justice H. K. McCay was unmoved; “We have had too much of this mercy,” he insisted.

Eberhart’s case was the subject of extensive coverage in state and national newspapers, and when her sentence was upheld, an array of sympathizers petitioned Governor Smith to spare her from the gallows. The governor refused, and subsequent attempts to influence Sheriff W. H. Matthews also proved unsuccessful. For her part, Eberhart claimed to be at peace, and observers described her as calm when approaching the gallows for her execution on May 2, 1873. 

Fallout from the Eberhart execution continued in the years that followed. Haunted by his role in the affair, and by Eberhart’s prolonged suffering in particular, Sheriff Matthews died by an apparent suicide years later. Governor Smith’s reputation suffered grievously, and he was never again elected to office in Georgia. To avoid a similar fate, subsequent governors seldom allowed white women to be put to death; Black women were executed on numerous occasions, however. In 2015 Kelly Renee Gissendaner became only the fourth white woman to be executed in Georgia.  

MYSTERY PHOTO

Indoor scene has big clues staring you in the face

Today’s Mystery Photo will either hit you in the eye and you will spot it quickly, or it will confuse you. Take a crack at telling us about what this photo is, and what it means, and where it is. Send your answer to elliott@brack.net, including your hometown.

The last mystery was quickly spotted by Joe Allen of Duluth: “This photo is at Jekyll Island, Ga., at Days Inn and Suites. My wife and I stay there when we visit our daughter who attends the College of Coastal Georgia.”  The photograph came from Joe Edlhuber of Norcross.

Two others recognized it. They were George Graf, Palmyra, Va. and Allen Peel of San Antonio, Tex., who wrote: “Today’s mystery photo was taken facing the rising sun and overlooking one of the two swimming pools of the the Days Inn and Suites. The fact that there are no patrons sitting in any of the lounge chairs at the pool suggests that this is an early morning sunrise rather than a sunset.”

LAGNIAPPE

You can get instant acceptance at Georgia Gwinnett College

College application procedures can be lengthy, confusing and overwhelming, but a Georgia Gwinnett College (GGC) initiative is simplifying the process. Instead of processing admissions applications and related paperwork at GGC, college personnel traveled to schools in the Atlanta Metro area to offer Instant Decision Days to high school seniors. The events allow college hopefuls to meet with GGC’s admissions counselors, who help them fill out GGC application forms and evaluate their transcripts. Students who meet GPA requirements are provided an instant admissions decision on the spot.

CALENDAR

Art on the Chattahoochee River will be Saturday, April 30 from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at Jones Bridge Park in Peachtree Corners. More than 40 artists will be on hand with a Kids’ Zone, and dinosaur lovers can participate in a Dino-Art contest open to all ages.

Championship golf returns: The Mitsubishi Electric Golf Classic of the PGA tour of champions, will be May 2-8 at TPC Sugarloaf Country Club in Duluth. The event, which will benefit local charities through the Gwinnett Championship Foundation Inc., has raised over $3 million since inception in 2013.

Snellville Commerce Club will have its next meeting on May 3 at noon at Snellville City Hall. On tap will be the announcement of the two 2022 scholarship award winners. Reservations are required, and may be made via this link. 

Opening Day for the Norcross Community Market will be Wednesday, May 4, from 4 to  7 p.m. at its new location in Thrasher Park.  The market will continue every Wednesday through August. 

Author Visit: Join Gwinnett County Public Library as it presents author Mark Warren in conversation with Gwinnett SToPP program (featured in the book), Georgia State University  Professor Joyce King, and Michael Tafeski of the Southern Poverty Law Center as they discuss the book, Willful Defiance.  The meeting will be at the Norcross Branch Library, 5735 Buford Highway, on May 5 at 6:30 p.m. Complimentary refreshments and a silent auction will be sponsored by the Friends of the Library.

Chocolate Summer Camp: At Peterbrooke Chocolate at the Forum in Peachtree Corners summer day camp, your child will be a chocolatier for the day! The campers will spend the day dipping their favorite treats in chocolate. The campers will learn all about the history of chocolate from how to hand dip chocolate creations from our chocolatiers! The campers will dip caramel apples, pretzels, Oreo’s, potato chips, and graham crackers into chocolate! Every Camper will also package their very own chocolate creations to take home. At the end of the day, campers will play chocolate trivia to win some sweet prizes! The daily session costs $50 per child. The price includes a Jason’s Deli Lunch and gelato for dessert, and of course Peterbrooke Chocolate!  The camp is every Tuesday and Thursday beginning May 27 through August 9. Call for more details at 770-817-8118. 

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