Bordering on Madness?

fence

This is madness.

The Madness of King George continues, as this week his administration announced plans to use waivers to continue with the Mexican border fence project. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, ignoring more reasonable options, decides to lie to the American people and claims he has no option but to build the fence. His logic? When confronted with the supposedly conflicting priorities of protecting habitats or stopping criminals and illegal immigrants from crossing the border, the latter trumps the former.

There are other options, of course.

This project completely ignores the impact on wildlife in these regions and is simply throwing money down the drain. There are a host of issues, including the disruption of fragile desert ecosystems, including the disruption of migration routes of numerous species, from snakes to jaguars.

Even some Republicans are screaming about water rights issues for ranchers, although the fence conveniently bypasses border property owned by individuals with close White House ties.

Bring the damn troops home, arm them with rubber bullets and bullhorns and put them along the border. We’ve got to do something to stop the flood of immigrants, but we can’t destroy biological diversity in the process. Get rid of NAFTA. Invest just a fraction of what’s being spent in Iraq in southern Mexico and see what happens, but this is insane.

And if you want to know what it will ultimately look like, check this out. The story is about Israel’s wall.

Guess it’s time to get Whiskey out of barn, saddle up, load the old Winchester and mend the fences.

Cactus Jack

————————

April 1, 2008, 3:15PM
Administration will use waivers to build border fence, feds say

Invoking the two legal waivers, which Congress authorized, will cut through bureaucratic red tape and sidestep environmental laws that currently impede the Homeland Security Department from building 267 miles of fencing in California, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas, according to officials familiar with the plan. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment publicly about it.

The move is the biggest use of legal waivers since the administration started building the fence, and it will cover a total of 470 miles along the Southwest border, the department said. Previously, the department has used its waiver authority for two portions of fence in Arizona and one portion in San Diego.

“Criminal activity at the border does not stop for endless debate or protracted litigation,” Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said in a statement. “These waivers will enable important security projects to keep moving forward.”

As of March 17, there were 309 miles of fencing in place, leaving 361 to be completed by the end of the year to meet the department’s goal. Of those, 267 miles are being held up by federal, state and local laws and regulations, the officials said.

One waiver will address the construction of a 22-mile levee barrier in Hidalgo County, Texas. The other waiver will cover 30 miles of fencing and technology deployment on environmentally sensitive ground in San Diego, southern Arizona and the Rio Grande; and 215 miles in California, Arizona and Texas that face other legal impediments due to administrative processes. For instance, building in some areas requires assessments and studies that — if conducted — could not be completed in time to finish the fence by the end of the year.

Full story here or here:

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/tx/5665840.html

Posted: April 4th, 2008
Categories: Community, Environment
Tags:
Comments: No Comments.