Saturday, September 17, 2011

The Ever-Increasing Collateral Damage of the Border Wall




     In my brief career as a landscaper I learned that a weed is something growing where you don't want it.  By extension an otherwise comely ten foot burgundy fence becomes an eyesore, a nuisance,  an obstacle and even part of a death trap.   No one attending the Saturday morning meeting at the Fort Brown Golf Course Clubhouse about the problems created by the placement of the border wall even fantasizes about it being torn down in the immediate future.  Actually, one diminuitive patriot, Dagoberto Barrera loves everything about the wall and the protection it affords him against Mexican nationals, people he describes as "not of our culture.  They eat with their fingers, their heads bobbing up and down to the table like ducks".
Dagberto Barrera
Since previously I've described Dago as a working class hero, let me take him back a notch.  Today, he was more like an 80 year old skinhead with matching shirt and tie, a patriot with his nationalism wound just a bit too tight.  I quickly scratched Mr. Barrera off my short list for the ambassadorship to Mexico.


     Senator Eddie Lucio, Jr. expressed disappointment that his bill #1809, calling for an economic impact study of the effects of the border wall on those Texans living south of it did not pass the Texas senate.  John Moore asked if local law enforcement had done any studies to determine if the wall had slowed the flow of drugs north or lowered the number of crimes committed  by the undocumented.  Lieutenant Art Barrera of the Texas Rangers did not know.  Sheriff Omar Lucio, as might be expected of an octogenarian sent someone else in his stead.  The message from Lucio was delivered by Lieutenant Rick Perez, called Roman Perez by Senator Lucio.  Perez said the border wall was a bad idea, not nearly as effective as additional manpower.

A grant of 2.2 million received by the sheriff's department permitted the department to retain 12 "boots on the ground" along Hwy 4 to Boca Chica Beach, a prime trafficking location.  He detailed the drug tonnage, the weaponry, the vehicles seized.   The grant runs out at the end of the year.
     Mean Mister Brownsville asked if any of the reported 80 gates were going to be built in Cameron County.  Senator Lucio had heard nothing about gates, but a young attorney from Austin raised her hand.  She said 30 gates were designated for Cameron County, 12 for Hidalgo County to be built in a 6 to 12 month time frame.  She stated that 4-6 test gates would initially be built.  A Sierra Club spokesperson mentioned that 27 laws had been waived with the construction of the wall, including Native American Territorial and burial rights, water rights, property rights, etc.


     State Representative Rene Oliveira spoke of record apprehensions of the undocumented and record deportations during the Obama administration.  Of course, no study has been done to show if deaths in the desert have increased since wall construction in the more populated areas.   Actually, no study of any kind seems to have been done.  Two instructors from UTB,  (Jeff & Jude?) described a partial study comparing those that live in the gaps between the wall to those living behind the wall.  Economically, the gappers won.    A lady named Michelle described the personal terror of frequent helicopter flights over her home, no Brownsville PD presence,  hearing gunfire, losing pets and property.   Another lady mentioned possible psychological damage to children growing up with the hindrance of the wall.
     Paster Brad closed the meeting requesting that the food we were about to receive would nourish our bodies, that Mexico would someday enjoy peace, that our leaders would lead with wisdom, all in Jesus name.







7 comments:

  1. Jim, a wall is needed, they need to slow down the human trafficking and the as many drugs as possible.
    It is election Time and Eddie Lucio Jr. and Rene Oliveria are politicking, Lucio and his tired out stories.

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  2. According to law enforcement at the hearing, the wall has had not slowed the flow of drugs into the U.S. one iota. More drugs are coming in post wall than pre-wall according to local law enforcement.

    Jim

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  3. You are going to believe local political law enforcement, Jim. How does law enforcement know there is more drugs coming across? Are they stopping the drugs? Are they letting the drugs get through?

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  4. I don't trust the Sheriff's dept. in fact I have trouble believing much of anything when it comes to human trafficking and drugs.
    Law enforcement plays with the numbers just to make themselves look good.

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  5. I have no reason to trust or not trust law enforcement. Lucio obviously does not like the wall, possibly because he feels funds should have gone for "boots on the ground" instead. At best the wall seems to have been a trivial annoyance for those moving drugs north.

    Jim

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  6. There are already more boots on the ground than ever before. By the standards of the political law enforcements, the drugs are coming across now more than ever before even with more boots on the ground and a wall. Nothing is good enough for these people. There numbers are bull shit unless they are seeing the drugs come across and doing nothing about it. Which is it, pinheads?

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  7. When will America start talking about the drug consumption on its side of the border. It needs to do more to stop the abusive use of drugs by its citizens. It is a question of demand and supply. In the United tates there is a demand and Mexico has the suplly side covered. When the US and pendejos like dagoberto start realizing that many druggies from thi side of the border stop using their fingers to snort the drug and or inject the drug then we will have commenced a serious discussion on drugs in America. The wall is just a optical ilssuion to apease the hate mongering anti Immigrants that think that Dagoberto is a dipshit.

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