7/8/13

House Republicans Should Pass a Border Security Bill-Not Amnesty

Democrats have except no interest in defending the American working class. It is a middle-class party of greed chasing after Wall Street and boardroom positions. They can offer depravity and benefits to the upwardly mobile class yet much may be smoke and mirrors as real wages decline for the middle class and families often have two SUV-winners. The ordinary working class is history's lint. Workers need to rely on Republicans to stop illegal migrant worker saturation of the nation and that is like expecting slavers to defend against importation of slaves. With so much cheap labor globally and with Democrat Party leaders levering more and more the future of those without Democrat Party  class qualifications or wealth is decreasingly bright.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ixrHYSjMfQI

Since the end of the cold war the national Democratic Party has thrown in the towel on the defense of working class economic facts. Labor unions were sent to the hospice of economics while Democrat Party bosses moved toward Wall Street, Krug champagne and salmon caviar. 


Democrats signed off on the unnecessary Bush era foreign wars and supported outsourcing of jobs to China and insourcing of illegal alien workers. With the post-cold war environment of billions of new laborers too compete against the only way to defend American workers from drowning in global competition was to enforce border security and keep illegal migrant workers out. In the decline of American industrialism and wages of the working class sober management of national labor supply was vital. Democrats refused to secure the Mexican border against terrorist and illegal worker crossing.

The present Democrat administration has set an agenda of poverty for a new generation of American workers compiling vast public debt with permanent low wages. When inflation returns high unemployment and inflation may make purchases of food difficult. Yet the public is encouraged to live on government food and phone life support anyway, who needs work, and what value are college degrees anyway when cheap labor supply is available and millions of service jobs can be made to steady even the unemployed middle class in minimum wage work?

Republicans should pass a border security bill in the House. If after five years of zero illegal immigration they want to take another look at the separate issue of what to do with the ten to twenty illegal aliens already in the nation that would be reasonable. It is probable though that it would require five years minimum to even construct an effective Mexican boundary control zone across the southern border. A decree by King Canute will not just roll back the tide with a pleasing aesthetic ambiance.

So why should anyone believe the next try would be better? Before the last virtual border fence was built Congress believed it was a sure-fire state-of-the-art go. Selling the Brooklyn Bridge to the Senate might not be as difficult or take weeks to get 68 votes. The Los Angeles Times reported in 2010 that the virtual fence worked on just 53 miles of the 2000-mile border.

The last time D.H.S. did not have adequate over-site of its prime contractor. After reading a quality fiction book by the attorney who impeached Gov. Blogojevich of Illinois about government insider corruption one wonders if Boeing of Chicago- the builder of the last virtual fence- will bet returning to the friendly Obama trough again.

The Secure Border Initiative was virtually a leaky bucket of a sales job. The physical fence was not completed and the virtual fence was non-sense. Since the contract for the last one was cancelled in 2011 the administration and Democrat accomplices of the Senate might feel its time to shovel some more pork.

Operation Igloo White developed by the U.S. Government during the Vietnam Conflict was one of the first large scale efforts at constructing a virtual fence to interdict opposition employment force illegal aliens. Those soldiers were of the communist political theory and infiltrated supplies down the Ho Chi Minh trail in to the Republic of Vietnam. The sewing of sensors along the trail to alert satellites and scramble bombing missions when opposition work-force infiltrators arrived to cut down the average wages of free market workers (well, perhaps this analogy isn't terribly accurate yet the point that the virtual fences are too expensive is the point here) of poor South Vietnamese peasant laborers wasn't entirely ineffective. 

The costs of the virtual fence were said to be a self-inflicted wound to American treasure as it was asymmetric economic war. The military supplies lost by the infiltrators were of far less cost than the virtual fence technology. Personnel costs to the infiltrators were significant.

Physical barriers are sometimes effective against ground-game invaders. Hadrian's Wall built by the Roman Army in the 2nd century along the Scottish border kept those savages out of Roman England for quite some time. Illegal aliens today have more numbers and technology than the Scot savages back in the day yet not the energy and time. If Hadrian's Wall worked against the Scots a new, improved berm with hybrid electric cars driving along the top to patrol should work now.

Building physical boundary defense walls creates jobs. They can also set aside ecological reserve areas for wildlife-perhaps jaguars and other endangered species of the South. The two lines of Walls of Constantinople kept the Byzantine Empire safe enough for nearly one thousand years. And let us not forget Offa's Dyke of the 8th century that protected Mercia from the savages of Powys (Welch) back in the day. The berm was as much as 85 feet wide and 8 feet high and ran along areas between the kingdoms without natural barriers.

Clawdd Offa can be an inspiration to builders of a meaningful new border barrier between the U.S.A. and Mexico. An All-American aqueduct could be built along with a berm to carry saltwater pumped up from the Pacific Ocean to the continental divide that is allowed to flow downhill in each direction. Some of the saltwater would be evaporated and condensed under plastic to make freshwater for agriculture and recreation. Solar power might be used to give a boost to the vast siphon exploiting the difference between Pacific and Gulf of Mexico waters to maintain a constant flow rate to replace water lost to evaporation and other uses.

A border barrier recreation and desalination zone would be a better project than a sterile fence that doesn't grow anything at all and is an experimental area for infiltration, climbing, tunneling and so forth. A fence is a thing that inventors might use large mortars to launch illegal watermelons over, and catapults flinging people with parachutes might be attempted on the silly fence. Probably fence contractors want the work that thereafter is as much an eyesore as any for-profit prison's fences.

Why the U.S. Congress has no imagination or desire to make a profit on large-scale projects these days is uncertain. In former times they has the Columbia Basin project, the Apollo program, The Tennessee Valley Authority and so forth. The Congressional ideas about border security flim flam fencing are irritating. Some of us like neighborhoods without ugly California fencing subdivisions so that wildlife can wander freely. Border control zones need aesthetic earthworks and water filled canals that are useful and park-like yet effective. Building a prison infrastructure to keep unemployed Americans from leaving eventually isn't a good idea. Teach the unemployed to fish in a desert by building a canal filled with piped-in water is to keep illegal workers out too.



 Even two border patrolmen per mile instead of one won't stop careful infiltration of terrorists and shock workers. Without patrol cars driving atop a series of reinforced berms with green space between as well as canals the defense infrastructure is more to keep bureaucrats and lawyers out rather than illegal workers that Democrat politicians like.

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