The Greatness Hiding Behind the Wall
The Greatness Hiding Behind the Wall
America! Land of the Free, Home of the Brave! One of President Trump's most successful selling points going into the 2016 election was his intention to build a big, beautiful wall to keep Americans safe and to keep the riffraff out. “Build the Wall!” they chanted. Proud patriots got behind the wall idea and sent Mr. Trump to Washington to seal the deal. Now that a few years have passed, it's worth examining how it's going. Is the big, beautiful wall making us Great Again, or is it merely a reflection of our existing greatness?How big is that beautiful wall anyway? In order to protect the border from sea to shining sea, we'd need 1,954 miles of an impenetrable barrier, well-maintained and consistently patrolled. So far, the Trump administration has spent $15 billion (in American dollars, not Mexican pesos) to build 216 miles of wall, most of which replaced older fencing instead of extending protection into new areas. (Consulting FOX News in an effort to cast this in the best possible light, one reads that when older fencing is taken down first, the replacement counts as new wall because it is made from a different material.)Although Trump had to scale back ambitious plans due to funding shortfalls and adjustments that must be made when estimates crash into rugged reality, DHS is speeding construction by waiving the sort of regulations that reduce costs by requiring competitive bidding, allowing the government to pay more for less. Providing certified cost data to insure we're only paying a reasonable number of billions of dollars is burdensome, the Administration claims. What patriotic taxpayer wouldn't be excited to toss extra money into the pockets of guys like Tommy Fisher, who won a $400 million contract after wooing the President on Fox & Friends? (Fisher's company has only been fined 16 times by the EPA since 2000, and penalized almost $1.7 million after nine counts of tax fraud that landed Fisher's brother, then VP of the company, in prison. Small potatoes! It's not like they put bounties on American troops or anything.)Fisher is so impatient to get the wall built that he's doing it on his own. In an attempt to showcase his high quality wallbuilding skills and help Trump get the job done timely, he constructed three miles of what he calls the "Lamborghini" of border walls on privately owned land right on the bank of the Rio Grande. The officially proposed path is a about a mile behind the wall Fisher built, and for good reason: months later, the river is eroding and undermining the 2.5-foot deep footings. They were cheaper and quicker to build than the official government design which relies on bollards sunk 6-7 feet underground for stability, but is it really a bargain if the wall flops over in the water?Another story behind the wall is a reminder that not all costs are monetary. In Arizona, DHS has allegedly toppled and butchered hundreds of legally protected saguaro cacti to get them out of the way of construction. Saguaro, which can grow more than 45 feet tall and live more than 200 years, are sacred to the Tohono O’odham people who live nearby. The government, of course, claims that the uprooted cacti were taken to new forever homes, not left fallen and damaged as in photos tweeted by protesters.
Construction crews continue work on the new border wall on the boundary between the United States and Mexico. Photo by Mani Albrecht, courtesy of U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, via Flickr. United States Government Work.
Sources:
He Built a Privately Funded Border Wall. It’s Already at Risk of Falling Down if Not Fixed.
Thorny issue: Ancient cacti uprooted for border wall construction
Trump campaigns on border wall progress. There’s not much of it
Border Wall progress: What’s been built so far?
Trump's border wall plans reduced as cost estimates increases
Winner of $400M border wall contract: ‘a gung-ho, smart guy’
Homeland Security waives contracting laws for border wall
South Texas landowners are hoping to use President Trump's own words against him in a new border wall lawsuit
In risky bid, Trump stokes racial rancor to motivate voters
Virus fear prompts Mexican town to block road from US border
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.