Well, I don’t reside that close to the border. Bit I do live in Texas, about 150 miles from the border. Me, myself & I would like nothing terribly complicated, just some quad-.50s placed in towers approximately a mile apart from each other across the entire land border with Mexico. With about ten thousand rounds of ammo each. Backed up by airmobile forces of specially trained border guards, backed up by fully armed Apaches.
You shouldn’t blame the people.It is the government’s fault for lax enforcement of existing immigration/employment laws. Blame corporations who lobby for lax enforcement and porous borders. And don’t forget to blame consumers who demand cheap goods and services.
I live 90 miles north of TJ.
Scouts Out! Cavalry Ho!
A 10 s to
However, the most formidable wall would be NO WELFARE, NO FREE SCHOOL, NO RIGHT TO WORK, NO RIGHT TO A BANK ACCOUNT, NO ABILITY TO RENT AN APARTMENT OR HOME...etc
Self-Deportation can work!
/backed up by fully armed Apaches./
http://www2.palomar.edu/users/scrouthamel/HS%20by%20Native%20Americans.gif ( ; )
Benjamin Leaton was a trader, freight hauler along the Chihuahua Trail, and a bounty hunter paid by various local governments in Mexico for each scalp taken from an indigenous person. He also traded munitions to the Apache and Comanche for any stolen cattle they brought him.[2] When Presidio County was established in 1850, Fort Leaton was its first seat of government.[3] Leaton died in 1851,[4] and his widow married Edward Hall who continued operating the freight business from the fort. Hall became financially indebted to Leaton’s scalp hunting partner John Burgess. Hall defaulted on his debt to Burgess in 1864, and was murdered. Burgess took over the fort, and was in turn murdered by Leaton’s son in 1875. The Burgess family remained in the fort until they abandoned it in 1926.[5]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Leaton_State_Historic_Site
Several of our local /Hispanics/ are really Apache...and most know that they are Indio...