Through The Looking Glass To the "Border Fence"

This is the border you're paying to fence.

Border security may conjur up visions of illegals wading the Rio Grande and Tom Tancredo advertising terror attacks by brown people, but still the Department of Homeland Security is doggedly proceeding with plans to put up that infamous fence it has postulated. Opposed by border police officials, Governor Perry of Texas, border merchants who are being boycotted by infuriated Mexican buyers, and refusing to consult on the matter, they are the newest advocates of Good Fences Make Good Neighbors, without apologies to Robert Frost.

Along the border many residents also are refusing to give up their land to enable the quixotic idea of keeping out those invading hordes by putting up a fence. DHS is giving them warning today, they're determined to commit the atrocity they've planned and next it's the courts. Myself, I think one look at the Big Bend area pictured above and you will see it's ridiculous to think a little fence is going to sterilize our border. And I am hopeful that if it gets to court there will be sane judges on the bench at the time.

Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff is giving Texas landowners opposed to a border fence one last chance to allow access to their land before he takes court action against them, a Texas senator said Thursday.

Sen. John Cornyn said letters from the Department of Homeland Security are expected to go out today. But for those who refuse to provide the temporary access, the department would likely seek a court order to enter the property, he said.

"He assured me that negotiations would continue and his hope is the vast majority of these cases could be resolved without litigation – maybe in a handful of cases litigation would be required," he said.

Some residents in the Rio Grande Valley, where opposition to the fence is most fervent, have refused to let federal officials on their land. Earlier this year, Brownsville Mayor Pat Ahumada refused to sign documents allowing workers access to city property.

A Homeland Security Department spokesman was not immediately available for comment.

President Bush last year approved 700 miles of fencing and barriers on the U.S.-Mexico border to stop illegal immigration and smuggling. Unlike other states, most land in Texas is in private hands.

"All that will do is fire people up more down here," John McClung, president of the Texas Produce Association, said of the impending letters.
(snip)
Opponents have said federal officials have failed to keep them fully informed on fence plans and refused to listen to residents' proposals for alternatives. Others say the fence is a waste of taxpayers' money and will hurt border economies.

The occupied White House is amassing a psychotic record on so many fronts, it's beginning to wear down credulousness. Another incidence of insane wastrel spending is just another 'brick in the wall'. This one needs to be listed very high on the accumulating reasons that the whole executive branch should be wearing white coats that has sleeves tied in the back.

A wall is in itself ridiculous, as Sen. Ted Kennedy has often noted, because if it's ten feet high, there will always be eleven foot ladders. For anyone who remembers the Berlin Wall, it was constantly breached. But psychologically, it seems, the DHS has committed to this absurdity, and like the cretin in chief, you don't confuse them with the facts, their minds are made up.

This is Alice in Wonderland behavior. Maybe if they take another bite of their cookie, they will outgrow it. Or the courts, as I hope, may see reality and make an end of this nonsense.

(This post also at http://cabdrollery.blogspot.com )

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From illlegals building it in California to severing

National Wildlife Refuge lands and a college campus in Texas, this "border fence" is a travesty in so many ways.
California irony : fence contractors fined for using illegal labor
Border fence endangers wildlife in Arizona AND throughout Chihuahuan desert borderlands
Fence route slices through campus in Brownsville (warning: pay site)


We can admit that we’re killers … but we’re not going to kill today. That’s all it takes! ~ Captain James T. Kirk, Stardate 3193.0

1 John 4:18

exactamente

my thanks to you (two and whomeva else here) for pointing out the lunacy, hypocrisy and cruelty of this whole charade.

and thanks for the beautiful pic.
___________________________
.delusions of un mundo mejor.

___________________________
.delusions of un mundo mejor.

Nezua, if you haven't yet

you really need to see Tommy Lee Jones' movie, "The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada."

I confess, I didn't like some of the misogyny in it; it's too casual, too pervasive, and too ... realistic. And seriously? Pete ought to be brought up on charges for abusing a corpse.

But still. As a reference for and an homage to what the West has turned into (and somebody ought to knock Larry McMurtry in the head, because his "devolution to realism" in his "epic Westerns" painted only the ugliest possible parts of the picture) since 1980, DESPITE the landscapes it leads you through ... it's a documentary of the Trans-Pecos and Chihuahua/Coahuila/Texas border that takes your breath away.

We can admit that we're killers ... but we're not going to kill today. That's all it takes! Knowing that we're not going to kill today! ~ Captain James T. Kirk, Stardate 3193.0


We can admit that we’re killers … but we’re not going to kill today. That’s all it takes! ~ Captain James T. Kirk, Stardate 3193.0

1 John 4:18

wrong photo

Sorry to be picky, but the photo you have is from Zion in southern Utah, not Big Bend. [Big Bend wouldn't have the light sandstone on top.]

For spectacular, look at Mariscal or Santa Elena Canyons at the BIBE website:
http://www.nps.gov/bibe/photosmultimedia...

I know the border, I've done fieldwork along the border (even once mistakenly half a mile inside Mexico in Pinto Wash), the border is a friend of mine, and that's not the border.

The border fence will be a travesty in may places, and for different reasons. It will cut off the transborder Indian lands west of Nogales, block animal migration to wildlife refuges and to the Rio Grande water supply in Texas.

If you want to look at the stretch from El Paso (Rio Grande) to Yuma (Colorado), borrow an old copy of Robert Humphrey's "90 Years and 535 Miles", paired photos of the boundary monuments at erection in 1892-1894 and then again in 1984. The point of the book was to document vegetation change, but the story of the congressional funding of the monuments is amusing in terms of "the more things change...". There was a 50% budget overrun (from $100 to $150 per monument) because the original plan was to cast the monuments and then haul them to location, but "This soon proved not to be feasible, perhaps because a 710-pound package carried on one side of a mule was a physical (or biological) impossibility, while two such weights, one on each side for balance, was too much of a load for even the best Missouri or Mexican mule."

fence

long live republicans

Thanks, tp, you're right

I admit I googled Big Bend and picked a pic that I liked for its ruggedness, not realizing. You're right, it is Zion, and I didn't realize that it wasn't actually Big Bend since it looked so similar, to my eyes.

Still amazing to me, that the public money is being spent on what we call a boondoggle, without anyone's being able to apply rationality to this huge piece of nonsense.

Ruth

Ruth