Remember, all it takes to get over a $1 billion, 20 foot border wall is a $10, 21 foot ladder. Or in Spanish, make that a $176 peso, 6.4 meter ladder.
Let's face it the "War on Drugs" is a dismal failure and never has worked. Same goes for the war on keeping Mexico workers out of the US who want to do all our sh*tty jobs, like flipping burgers, gardening and being maids. Back in the Cold War days the American government mocked the Berlin Wall as a dismal failure for keeping East Germans out of the West, but somehow those same politicians refuse to admit our "War on Drugs" is just as much of a failure.
Valdez: Hey, Trump: Border walls are for suckers Linda Valdez, The Republic | azcentral.com 5:31 p.m. MST April 11, 2016 The news brings us two recent examples of why border walls don’t work. Can someone alert Donald Trump? Exhibit A comes from the Border Patrol, which issued a press release April 6 asking people to be on the lookout for drones. “The Yuma Sector Border Patrol has recently encountered small remote controlled aircraft, commonly referred to as drones, being used to smuggle drugs into the United States. The drones vary in size, but are commonly between 2 to 4 feet wide," it says. "Drones have been observed primarily in the San Luis area," the press release continues. "They are known to carry illegal contraband into the U.S. where it is dropped and picked up by smugglers north of the border.” They included a picture of a drone so everyone would know what to look for. No word on whether the drone in the picture was one captured at the border. Here's the rub: The Yuma Sector is the go-to place when border-hawk politicians want to point to a place where fencing has led to “operational control.” Guess what? The smugglers figured out a way over. Exhibit B in this tutorial on why walls don't work comes from a widely viewed video showing would-be smugglers easily scaling a border fence – in full view of Border Patrol agents – then skedaddling back into Mexico when they realize they were being filmed, according to the Associated Press. Border Patrol spokesman Mark Landess told AP it's not uncommon for smugglers to scale the steel fence, especially around Nogales, which is a busy drug-smuggling corridor. It took these guys mere seconds to scale the wall, which cost you the taxpayer, mere gazillions of dollars to build and maintain. The wall might stop a busboy or two from getting to work. It doesn't stop the cartels who hire agile young men to get illegal drugs to the waiting U.S. market. Wall climbers are called Mexican Spidermen. Those who are willing to pay for more walls are called suckers. Walls don’t work. Can we move on to a more productive discussion? NOTE: Here is the video posted on the Azteca Noticias YouTube page. It shows the men scaling the fence both ways with ease. That part starts a little less than one minute into the video, which is in Spanish. |