At the same time that Europe is struggling to open borders to each other
and embrace the interdependance they exist within, we in the U.S. are
trying to do the opposite, fiercely denying the interdeendace we have with
our southern neighbor. I find it all very troubling.
Even if one can support such a thing, tt appears that the logistics
of doing such a thng are wreaking havoc on the kinds of things we
(should) hold dear - democracy, freedom, our heritage, individual rights,
community and openess. Here's just a couple of the stories I've read
recently that should bring pause. There's much more.
Standoff Near
the BorderOver the past year, leaders of the University of Texas at Brownsville and
Texas Southmost College have responded critically to a proposal by the
Department of Homeland Security to build a fence that would split up the
campus of the jointly managed institutions in the name of border security.
In recent months, its become increasingly clear just how adamant the
leadership is to fight for its position. Expressions of concern have now
turned to formal opposition.
[...]
What is being demanded, under threat of legal action, is unimpeded access
by military and civilian agencies to a UT System campus and its state and
locally financed buildings for an extended period of time for purposes of
determining if land and buildings will be condemned and seized, Garcia
wrote in her letter to alumni. I believe this is sufficient cause for
serious concern.
Garcia, who did not wish to comment for the story, reiterated in the
letter that a Homeland Security plan to build an 18-foot fence on top of a
levee north of its campus is unacceptable. Doing so would, in essence,
place the colleges International Technology, Education and Commerce
Campus, which is a mile west of the main campus and is the hub for
technology training, on the Mexican side, despite it being on U.S. soil in
Brownsville, Texas. Plans to build a fence on top of a levee just south of
an athletics field and parking lot also puts an entire golf course on the
Mexican side, Garcia said.
[...]
Land
grab
Federal suit against Eagle Pass seems to be unjustified intimidation of
border fence opponents.
The municipal administrators of the small Texas border town of Eagle Pass
were stunned last week to learn federal attorneys had gone to court and
secured an order forcing them to surrender 233 acres. The land would be
surveyed for a barrier to prevent illegal immigration.
As Eagle Pass Mayor Chad Foster noted, the city had already been working
with the border patrol on interdicting illegal aliens and was in the
process of granting an easement to allow federal construction of a roadway
and security zone on city land. Rather than continuing that amicable
relationship, Department of Homeland Security officials chose to file one
of the first condemnation suits against landowners resisting use of their
property for a border fence against a city that had cooperated with them.
Mayor Foster was not notified of the action until after U.S. District
Judge Alia Moses Ludlum had granted the order. The city never had an
opportunity to plead its case. It appears that the suit was intended as a
warning to a group of Texas municipal and business leaders opposing
construction of the billion-dollar barrier.
[...]
Border fence may
drive largest American cat to extinction
The Bush Administration's decision to not prepare a recovery plan for the
endangered jaguar in its native habitat in Arizona and New Mexico may
spell the end for the big cat in the United States, says an environmental
group.
The Center for Biological Diversity says the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service's decision seeks to circumvent the Endangered Species Act from
plans to build thousands of miles of wall on the U.S.-Mexico border
without environmental review.
"The wall will short-circuit current efforts by jaguars to recolonize the
United States," said the group in a statement. The jaguar once ranged from
Monterey Bay, California, to the Appalachian Mountains, and currently
occurs in southern Arizona and New Mexico where it is listed as an
endangered species.
Border
landowners sued by U.S. for fence study access
Nydia Garcia looked over the 80 acres of riverfront farmland that has been
in her family for centuries and pointed to where a tall security fence
would snake through the middle of her property, a half-mile from the Rio
Grande.
"My grandfather farmed this land," Mrs. Garcia said. "As kids, we'd ride
horses back here and swim in the river. ... What's going to happen now?
Will I need a passport to get into my own back yard?"
Mrs. Garcia and her family are among 71 Texans who just said no to the
Homeland Security Department's firmly written request for access to their
property along the Rio Grande as a potential site for a proposed border
security fence.
This week, the reality of that defiance struck close to home.
Homeland Security on Friday filed lawsuits against the Brownsville Public
Utilities Board and 11 Cameron County landowners characterized as being
associated with large businesses to gain access to their property, said
Cynthia Martinez, spokeswoman for Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid, which is
advising landowners. The action follows one earlier this week in which
U.S. prosecutors sued the city of Eagle Pass and nine individuals in
Arizona to force access to border property.
[...]
'An
erosion of democracy'
Texan landowners fight federal government over border fence.
Eloisa Garcia Tamez is a Texan through and through. Back in 1747, the King
of Spain granted her ancestors 12,000 acres of land. Through the
generations, the parcel shrunk smaller and smaller, but Dr. Tamez still
owns three of the original acres in El Calaboz, a tiny outpost on the
southernmost tip of Texas, along the border with Mexico.
And now the U.S. government wants build a massive fence right through the
middle of it.
Dr. Tamez is one of 135 landowners along the frontier who have received
warning letters from the government requesting temporary access to their
land for a 1,000-kilometre border fence to counter illegal immigration.
Many residents along the border in Texas, where the Rio Grande river forms
a natural border, see the fence as an unnecessary intrusion that will cut
off their access to water and crops and sever important ties with cities
and towns on the Mexican side. In Dr. Tamez's case, it could also fracture
the last remnant of her family's legacy.
[...]