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Illegals flow into Arizona like water through a broken dam
Manchester Union Leader ^ | May 7, 2005 | Renee Downing

Posted on 05/07/2005 5:09:05 AM PDT by billorites

LIKE MANY other southern Arizonans, I am deeply grateful to the few dozen vigilantes calling themselves Minutemen who set up camp along the Arizona-Mexico border last month. That few people around here were much impressed with a bunch of retirees in camouflage playing soldier, and that there turned out to be almost as many reporters as patriots on the ground, was irrelevant: We were just thrilled by the publicity. We’ve been trying to get the rest of the country to notice what’s going on down here for years.

U.S. immigration policy has turned the Arizona desert between Tucson and the border into a nightmare zone of suffering, death, destruction and terrible ironies, and the people who live here are sick to death of it. Human beings, fragile desert and a whole way of life are perishing, and no one out there seems to care.

For example: Ten days ago, the U.S. Border Patrol rescued 77 “illegal entrants” stranded in a barren stretch of desert 20 miles west of Tucson. After walking for five days, they’d overpowered their coyote (people smuggler), taken his cell phone, called 911 and written “Help” in big letters in the sand. Temperatures were in the 90s, and the group had run out of water the day before. Four people were taken to the hospital by ambulance for hyperthermia and dehydration; two stopped breathing while being examined. The story was so familiar, though, that the morning paper didn’t bother to run a follow-up.

The first thing to understand about the border is that the immediate problem isn’t so much the hundreds of thousands of undocumented immigrants who flood into the United States from Mexico every year. It’s our government’s response to them. While President Bush and others are trying to shape a realistic, orderly guest-worker program, one that would be more humane and presumably free up law enforcement to chase smugglers and terrorists, policy on the ground is to keep everyone out.

From a free-market point of view, this movement of people looks like a classic example of the law of supply and demand. Mexico is poor, overpopulated, intensely corrupt and has a nearly limitless supply of cheap, willing labor. Thanks to the North American Free Trade Agreement, competition with inexpensive American corn has ruined tens of thousands of small Mexican farmers, while many of the light manufacturing plants just south of the border that drew so many northward a decade ago have moved operations to Asia. People are going hungry.

The United States, on the other hand, is rich and needs workers who will take jobs Americans don’t want, for lower wages than Americans will accept. (Try this thought experiment: Imagine suggesting that your teen-ager take a summer job picking melons for 12 hours a day in California.) If, by magic, the Minutemen’s dreams were granted overnight — if the border were sealed and the estimated 11 million people living in this country illegally were deported — America would most likely be unrecognizable, and not in a good way. Crops would rot in the fields, bathrooms would stay dirty, mothers of small children would be stuck at home. America is addicted to cheap labor, and withdrawal is beyond contemplation.

Still, we maintain the pretense that we don’t want a docile underclass of workers coming into the United States, and we keep trying to catch them as they cross an increasingly policed border.

The militarization of what had been a fairly porous border started in the 1980s with Ronald Reagan’s “war on drugs,” but began in earnest in 1994, when the Border Patrol mounted Operation Gatekeeper and started building a fence between San Diego and Tijuana, eventually closing the entire California-Mexico border except for one small, environmentally sensitive gap. Then Operation Hold the Line at El Paso and Operation Rio Grande further east shut down most of the Texas border. These changes did not stop the traffic; they simply funneled it into New Mexico and Arizona.

Operation Safeguard was implemented here in Arizona in the border town of Nogales, where a fence went up dividing the American and Sonoran sides of town and diverting migrants out into the desert. The theory on our side seemed to be that no one would be desperate enough to try to cross 50 waterless miles of the Sonoran or Chihuahan desert on foot.

This supposition has proved to be wrong. The Border Patrol’s apprehensions between Oct. 1, 2003, and Sept. 30, 2004, in the Tucson sector totaled 491,771, or 1,347 per day, but the population of undocumented immigrants “has been growing robustly during most of the period of ‘concentrated border enforcement’,” according to the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute. The crossing has not become impossible, just more expensive and dangerous. Since 2000, more than 750 migrants have been found dead in the Arizona desert, according to county medical examiners. And from January 1995 through May 2004, more than 2,600 people have died along the whole border — roughly one death per day, 10 times the rate before operations began. These are just the documented deaths. No one knows how many more lie out there unknown, unrecovered and unrecoverable — after skeletons bleach in the sun long enough, cows and other animals eat them for the calcium.

Driving around the spectacular country south of Tucson, it’s hard to get your mind around the drama taking place just out of sight. A precarious trail along the slopes of the Baboquivari Mountains to the southwest, for instance, became a popular route last year because it’s so hard to patrol. Looking up at the shining white scopes of the National Observatory on Kitt Peak, at the towering sacred monolith of Baboquivari Peak further south, it’s hard to believe that dozens of human beings could be risking their lives on those rugged slopes even as you watch. Anyone who takes a bad fall along that trail is unlikely ever to be found.

The strategy of driving border crossers out into the wilds has also been hell on the people who live north of the line. Ranchers’ land has been covered with trash, their fences cut, livestock scattered, water tanks fouled and property destroyed. Some have given up and left, but it’s hard to sell out because people already know about the trouble. Residents of small, isolated towns have been faced by sudden buildups of equipment and personnel. The Border Patrol set up a “Special Operations” base over the ridge from the tiny settlement of Arivaca without informing inhabitants that 10 large trailers, 10 to 30 trucks, generators, stadium lights and night operations involving helicopters were about to become a feature of their lives for the foreseeable future.

At an emotional meeting held in the Arivaca civic center recently, several people who own land along the ridge poured out their frustration. You build your house next to a wildlife refuge, you tend to think your peace is guaranteed. The Border Patrol was invited to the meeting but did not attend.

The worst and most lasting damage to the landscape, though, is in the 90 percent of the border land that’s owned and theoretically protected by the U.S. government. A chain of wildlife preserves and other protected areas, including Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, is being destroyed, first by the footpaths and litter left by the migrants; second, and more seriously, by quasi-military activities of the Border Patrol.

The Border Patrol is flying Black Hawk helicopters and driving all-terrain vehicles and motorcycles around rare, beautiful desert lands, and no amount of complaint from locals, land managers or environmentalists has slowed them down. It is illegal to take vehicles off-road in national parks and preserves, and illegal for citizens to pull off the awful dirt roads of the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge anyplace where the soil is undisturbed, or to drive at all when the ground is wet. Cabeza Prieta, home to the last 40 Sonoran pronghorn antelope in the United States, is the wildest and driest of American deserts. The Border Patrol has a major base of operations within the refuge. The remaining traces of the centuries-old Camino del Diablo, the Devil’s Highway, have been obliterated, and miles of delicate desert turned to moonscape.

In spite of the collateral damage, what happens next will be more of the same. This March, U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Robert C. Bonner announced that the patrol is more than doubling the number of helicopters and planes along the Arizona border and bringing in 534 more agents.

Local opinion on the buildup ranges from outrage among social activists who want an open border all the way to approval from those who think “those people don’t belong here.” Recent immigrants from the Midwest who don’t know or care that Tucson has always been a “brown town” and the desperate ranchers along the border are pleased, if not convinced. Others are horrified that the government, finding that what it’s doing isn’t working, simply proposes to do more of it, and to do it here. The majority just want the whole mess to go away.

And so we who love this beautiful, dying region now live in a sort of occupied zone within our own nation, pinioned by politicians’ indifference and officials’ lack of imagination. We expect another bad summer.

Renee Downing is a freelance writer who has lived in southern Arizona for more than 30 years.


TOPICS: Mexico; News/Current Events; US: Arizona
KEYWORDS: 109th; 2006elections; 3rdworld; affirmativeaction; aliens; arizona; az; border; borderpolice; bordersecurity; bordersheriffs; buildthewall; bushamnesty; ca; calborder; california; cannon; cedillo; cedillosucks; closetheborder; commies; dhs; disease; diversity; education; endlatinlobby; englishlanguage; gangs; gingrich; hanes; hatingamericans; haynes; healthcare; illegalaliens; illegalimmigration; illegals; imigration; immigrantlist; immigration; internationallaw; lapd; losangeles; ma; maldef; mecha; mexa; mikecarona; minutemen; mmp; ms13; newjersey; newmexico; newt; ningunaentradailegal; nj; nm; not1moredime; nv; ny; oneworlders; or; pc; pckills; politalcorrectness; quotas; racialquotas; rayhanes; rayhaynes; realid; rescuecalifornia; screwlaraza; screwmaldef; screwmecha; shadowparty; supporttheusbp; tancredo; texas; tx; ushouse; ut; utah; voterid; wef; whereisgeorgebush; wto; yourtownnext
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To: billorites

The article has internal logical inconsistencies - a sure sign of liberal thinking...


61 posted on 05/07/2005 10:31:38 AM PDT by patton ("Fool," said my Muse to me, "look in thy heart, and write.")
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Comment #62 Removed by Moderator

To: Dane

"The point is that America has survived and prospered with every wave of immigrants, be they the Irish, Itlaians, Jews, etc.etc."

There has never been an immigration wave like this in US history. I guess we'll see how it will change the country.


63 posted on 05/07/2005 10:32:09 AM PDT by mthom
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To: IslamoCommieObserver
I guess I'm the 'overexcitable'! :-)

'fraid so. As onyx says, "Debate the facts and we win EVERY time."

64 posted on 05/07/2005 10:32:36 AM PDT by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: ProudVet77
Most people east of the Mississippi have no idea what is going west of it. Where are all of the major media outlets? East of the Mississippi.

Danbury mayor calls for deputizing state police as immigration agents [Connecticut]

See also:

Connecticut Town Struggles With Illegal Immigrants

Thursday, April 28, 2005

DANBURY, Conn. - This middle-class New England suburb is nowhere near an international border but it still has the illegal immigration problems familiar to cities like San Diego and Tucson, Ariz.

Mayor Mark Boughton blames the government for his town's inability to cope with 15,000 illegal immigrants, approximately 19 percent of the overall population.

"This is one community that has been incredibly stressed by failed federal policy and we need help," said Boughton.

Because the illegal residents aren't counted in the U.S. census, Danbury doesn't receive any federal aid for them.

"In terms of our social services, this presents a tremendous strain, particularly on quality of life of our neighborhoods, our schools our health care system," Boughton said.

Residents complain the influx is killing property values. Homeowner Peter Gadiel said neighbors are fed up. "They're blue collar workers and their whole life savings is tied up in their house and they're seeing their neighborhood being destroyed."

The mayor says he wants state police officers to be deputized as federal immigration officers - giving them access to a federal database and helping them track illegal immigrants. But Connecticut's attorney general said Boughton needs the approval of the governor and others before that can happen.

Boughton has set up a task force to inspect neighborhoods that have received a lot of complaints about buildings housing illegal immigrants. In one home, the task force found 30 cots in the basement, each one being rented for $5 a nigh

65 posted on 05/07/2005 10:32:45 AM PDT by antonia ("Democracy is the worst type of government, excepting all others." ~ Churchill)
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Comment #66 Removed by Moderator

To: IslamoCommieObserver
Knock it off.
67 posted on 05/07/2005 10:38:08 AM PDT by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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To: IslamoCommieObserver

At last, a workable solution! Good idea.


68 posted on 05/07/2005 10:38:16 AM PDT by TERMINATTOR ("I believe in background checks at gun shows or anywhere" - GWB)
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Comment #69 Removed by Moderator

To: IslamoCommieObserver; Dane
Now, THAT'S a good post! I'd be surprised if Dane has anything substantive to say in reply.
70 posted on 05/07/2005 10:42:07 AM PDT by Know your rights (The modern enlightened liberal doesn't care what you believe as long as you don't really believe it.)
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Comment #71 Removed by Moderator

Comment #72 Removed by Moderator

Comment #73 Removed by Moderator

To: Know your rights; IslamoCommieObserver
Now, THAT'S a good post! I'd be surprised if Dane has anything substantive to say in reply

Oh you mean like ICO's reply #62, quote,

So be it. This Dane character should be deported"

You all should really get off, and in this I mean, the addictive race baiting ways of tom tancredo rhetoric.

74 posted on 05/07/2005 10:49:47 AM PDT by Dane ( anyone who believes hillary would do something to stop illegal immigration is believing gibberish)
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To: VOX9
As long as people believe this bullcrap, illegal immigration will continue and current illegals will not be deported. In reality, as the cheap labor market shrinks, pay will go up and the unemployed LEGAL workers will take the jobs and benefit from the increased pay. When we no longer have to pay for free medical care, education and incarceration of illegals, our expenses (and crime) will go down. What doesn't wash we can handle, and our borders will be protected.

Exactly correct.
75 posted on 05/07/2005 10:50:09 AM PDT by UScbass
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Comment #76 Removed by Moderator

Comment #77 Removed by Moderator

To: IslamoCommieObserver; Dane

You don't get it, do you?

KNOCK IT OFF! Stop with the personal attacks.

Dane is a good FReeper who just happens to hold a differing view.

Personal attacks will not only get the thread pulled
but also NEVER ever persuade anybody to our side.


78 posted on 05/07/2005 10:54:28 AM PDT by onyx (Pope John Paul II - May 18, 1920 - April 2, 2005 = SANTO SUBITO!)
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To: IslamoCommieObserver
Dane is over at DU trying to come up with more material.

Dude you really shouldn't post form your bathroom(not good etiqutte), but what the hey, why should I be the one to chastise you as you are "sitting" in the bathroom posting, from your wieless connection and, IMO, getting some sort of weird pleasure, automatically posting to every word I say.

Now go back to DU and say how tolerant I've become.

79 posted on 05/07/2005 10:55:10 AM PDT by Dane ( anyone who believes hillary would do something to stop illegal immigration is believing gibberish)
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Comment #80 Removed by Moderator


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