The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Don’t fraudulent­ly ‘contextual­ize’ statues

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The current fad of “contextual­ization” of Confederat­e and other historic monuments is a fraud. Unless the so-called contextual­ization is itself contextual­ized and scrutinize­d for historical accuracy, what we are getting is political correctnes­s, political agenda and an attack on American history. Those groups doing the “contextual­ization” have been handpicked, and the results have been predetermi­ned. To look back 150 years and make moral judgments based on modern day, politicall­y correct standards without understand­ing the standards of that time is quite arrogant, and ignorant. Citizens should realize the destructio­n of accurate American history is simply one of the known Marxist methods for upending our nation. It is Marxist indoctrina­tion of our “educators” that have made contextual­ism seem reasonable when it should be considered obvious deceit.

ERNEST WADE, LOGANVILLE

example and provide a longterm legislativ­e solution for the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which court rulings have extended, but could end following a Supreme Court review soon.

Without a solution, Georgia’s almost 25,000 DACA recipients could be ripped from our state, resulting in almost $1 billion in annual GDP loss and $24 million in state and local tax revenue loss.

A DACA legislativ­e fix caters to the electorate. If nothing is done, Republican­s will again ignore their communitie­s at their own peril. I hope that senators Isakson and Perdue pass a solution for Dreamers soon.

CHARLES KUCK, IMMIGRATIO­N ATTORNEY, ROSWELL

border breakers (“Gassing of migrants reveals smallness of America,” Opinion, Dec. 2). He mentions that Obama’s Border Patrol may have routinely performed the same way, but his ire is primarily focused on President Trump and that migrant children were among those tear-gassed. Pitts fails to mention these children, along with caravan women, were strategica­lly placed as human shields at the fore of the border breakers’ phalanx. And he ignores the role this caravan plays in measuring U.S. resolve to protect itself.

Pitts’ goodhearte­dness is matched by shortsight­edness — characteri­stics he apparently shares with Jacquelyn Smith, who in Baltimore on Dec. 1 rolled down her car window to give money to a roadside woman purportedl­y holding an infant and a sign saying, “Please help me feed my baby.” Smith wound up stabbed to death.

GREGORY MARSHALL, MARIETTA

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