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Per ICE sources, the man seen in a viral video being subdued by residents & arrested by police w/ a blowtorch near the Kenneth fire in West Hills is an illegal alien from Mexico named Juan Manuel Sierra-Leyva... #OpenBorders
ACT for America | Secure Border Act
Border security is one of the most important national security issues that ACT For America is helping to enforce. California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas are not the only border states; due to our open, porous borders, where illegal immigrants can travel into our country, every state is now a border state. Representative Bob Goodlatte introduced the Securing America's Future Act of 2018 (H.R.4760), which partly addresses securing the border. In addition, the bill provides for more border security personnel and authorizes National Guard border security activities, as well as appropriations for border barriers. Contact us to learn more.
Thoughts on a Border Wall
(NOTE: I am not advocating any of this. I am simply laying it out.)
Point 1.
The border between the United States and Mexico is almost 2,000 miles long. The Rio Grande river makes up almost half of it.
a. We obviously cannot build a wall on the Mexican side of the river.
b. Building a wall on the US side of the river would cut the US off from the river, essentially ceding it to Mexico.
c. Building a wall in the middle of the river, if such a thing is even possible, would be, to put it mildly, an engineering challenge, and also incredibly expensive. Plus, the “middle” of a living, flowing river is not a static concept. Plus, we would have to build it on “our side” of the “middle.”
These facts mean that a wall is not a realistic or feasible way to seal almost half the border.
Point 2.
Along with an actual physical barrier, those who advocate it acknowledge that there will also have to be motion detectors and probably drones.
a. In order for motion detectors to be effective, they would have to be placed close enough together for their detection fields to overlap.
b. I haven’t seen any mention of this, but in order to prevent tunneling, seismic sensors would have to be used as well, and again placed close enough together for their fields to overlap.
Note that such a network of detectors and sensors can be deployed anywhere, including along a river bank.
c. A wall is a passive barrier. Motion detectors and seismic sensors are also passive; they can only indicate, not stop, incursion by sending a warning. Therefore actual human beings will be required to monitor the detectors and sensors. If drones are used, each drone would also require a human monitor.
If a wall is built along that portion of the border that isn’t the Rio Grande, it will be ineffective without this network of detectors, sensors, drones, and human monitors.
Point 3.
If detectors, seismic sensors, drones, and human monitors are all deployed, there would be no need to build a wall.
And if I’m smart enough to figure this out, surely someone in government is also smart enough.
Again, I am not advocating this.
I’m going to let everyone in on a little secret.
If people from South and Central America could create a first world country with a standard of living comparable to what we have in the United States, they would have done it.
They can’t do it, and they know they can’t. That’s why they want to come here, where all the hard work and investment has already been made.
South Korea did it. Their economy was equal to North Korea’s at the end of the war and now look at what they have built.
Germany did it. After the WWII bombings, Soviet destruction and total destruction of their infrastructure they rebuilt.
Japan did it. Tokyo was fire bombed and more people died than in the atomic blasts and now it is a modern city and has the one of the largest populations of any city in the world.
It's time to stop the insanity!