Bush's Border Fence Destroys Wilderness
The Bush administration is pushing ahead with what critics say is a final act of environmental vandalism in casting aside more than 30 laws and regulations to complete a 670-mile stretch of fence along the US-Mexico border by the end of this year.
The remaining 350-mile section of the planned anti-immigrant fence will run from the Colorado river to the remote Peloncillo mountains on the New Mexico border, slicing through the delicate fabric of an extensive network of national parks, monuments, wildlife refuges, forests and wilderness areas.
The controversial fence will divide Native American reserves as well as cutting through lands which have been handed down through families since Spanish colonial times.
Bulldozers and construction teams will soon move on to previously protected federal lands with some of the richest and most diverse natural habitats in the US. The resulting barrier, including banks of floodlights to light up the desert sky, will be impenetrable to many mammals but not necessarily to humans.
Illegal immigration is one of the hottest issues in the US presidential election and a sore point for the Republican candidate, John McCain. The Bush administration wants to show progress on an issue which the polls show is important to conservative voters. After being harshly criticised for being weak on immigration, Mr McCain recently changed tack to support the controversial fence.
The Bush administration says the barrier is needed to increase national security and the Homeland Security Secretary, Michael Chertoff, defended the decision to disregard environmental laws as enabling "important security projects to keep moving forward." By mid-March, 309 miles of the fence was in place, with 361 miles left to complete, some 267 miles of which are federal lands. Mr Chertoff said that more than 100 meetings had been held with environmental groups and Native Americans to try to achieve compromise on the objections to the last, and most difficult, leg.
The sheer isolation of the Arizona border region has made its public lands a place of abundant wildlife and plants, many of which are found nowhere else in the US. The fence will cross vast desert valleys crowded with saguaro cactus and ancient ironwood trees, as well as forested mountain peaks and rivers bordered by graceful cottonwood forests.
An alliance of environmental organisations says it will endanger Sonoran pronghorns, burrowing owls and put two types of endangered cougar-like cats - the ocelot and the jaguarundi - at risk of extinction by preventing them from swimming the Rio Grande to mate.
For the last 10 years, the dramatic rise in immigration enforcement efforts in heavily populated areas such as San Diego and El Paso has driven immigrants, and drug traffickers to the remote borders of Arizona as they seek to enter the country.
The US Border Patrol has followed the immigrant trail, bringing havoc in its wake by using off-road vehicles and low-flying helicopters, which the Defender of Wildlife organisation says "has resulted in significant environmental degradation in some of the most pristine and valuable wildlife habitats in the nation".
Even as the fence is being built, debate continues about whether it will do much to stall illegal immigration. Fernando Carrillo, a 32-year-old construction worker who was deported from Arizona six months ago, told the Associated Press it would not stop him from trying to get back to his wife and children in Phoenix. "They can do what they want, but we will keep trying," he said beside the new barrier west of Nogales.
© 2008 The Independent
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9 Comments so far
Show AllThe facts show that uncontrolled immigration is destructive to every country that tries it. Meanwhile businesspeople make out like bandits, and corrupt politicians pander to immigrants for easy votes.
No amount of sappy human-interest stories from the media will negate the disastrous effect of illegal immigration on the USA.
Debunking Pro-Mexican-Immigration Propaganda:
http://home.comcast.net/~plutarch/mexico.html
Bush's fence CREATES wilderness, too: A wilderness between the ensconced rich and the struggling poor.
While I don't think it makes sense to allow unlimited numbers of mostly non-English speaking people to overwhelm the civic systems of many municipalities in the US, I think a physical fence is (like the Israel's have erected in similar vileness), nothing but a dehumanizing, blunt force instrument designed to maintain elite priviliges against humand decency and Justice.
Mexico, like the USA, has huge natural wealth; and its people could live well in huge numbers if only the USA didn't support and prop-up an elitist arrangement in Mexico for (ultimately) USA-elitist purposes.
What I call the 'elites,' are really the moral dregs of humanity.
There remains a terrible, blood-drawing monstrousness in so many humans who manage to gain and hold worldly (modern?) power: It's appalling. And the USA is increasingly at the helm of it; spreading it everywhere, even at the maddness of destroying planetary life supports of Nature.
My body doesn't like cold and grey places. But more and more my spirit want to get out of this diseased USA culture: It wants to go to away from HERE, even if Scandanavia. Even if Iceland, a fairly harsh environment but with quite enlightened people who've managed to LEARN from the own, monstrous background.
whatfools April 3rd, 2008 1:34 pm
That's one of the most intelligent questions I've come across regarding the US-Mexican immigration issue...wonder how Lou Dobbs would respond to that.
Fear of "Immigrants" is a common tactic use by Fascist to scare the public into surrendering their rights and liberties. Has anyone thought about the fact that yes, the fence is to keep mexicans out... but it can also be used to keep americans in. Every day, I start to believe that you people are more fucked than you think.
So, um, we can conclude from the article that the DHS is going through an ocleot of trouble to keep Mexicans out.
Why would anyone want to come here to work for substandard wages, contribute to Social Security, Medicare and pay off the national debt and then go home without collecting on any of it? Perhaps the bigger question is why would any patriotic American taxpayer want to keep such people out?
Edward Abbey knew what to do with abominations of mankind that sullied the natural world.
Only white people can feel more strongly about animals than people. Hopefully this call for saving endangered jaguars ends up helping the 'aliens' even if they are illegal.
You don`t need a fence to stop illegal immigration. You need to trash NAFTA, which causes this desperation in the first place. But we all know where the 3 candidates stand on this. So there will be a fence.