The Huffington Post
Michael Dear
March 19, 2013
There are no magic words to solve the problems of immigration in the US or drug-related violence in Mexico. Instead, I offer one incontrovertible conclusion regarding the borderlands: the Wall will not work.
Here's why.
Because the Border Has Long Been a Place of Connection
The borderline is a permeable membrane connecting two countries. The inhabitants of this "in-between" territory thrive on cross-border exchange and collaboration, both of which have flourished for many centuries. There are strong senses of mutuality and attachment to territory among border residents.
Throughout time, many great dramas have been played out along what is today the border zone, including cataclysmic invasion, war, and revolution. The current afflictions in this troubled geographical vortex pertain to immigration and drug wars. The region has survived past upheavals, and will undoubtedly outlast the present woes.
A principal reason why border tensions are today so intense is that neither the migration nor drug problem has its origin in the borderlands. Instead, they originated from outside, and borderland communities have limited capacity for self-determination in these matters. At the national level, the US and Mexico each stand to gain from the sacrifices of that small subset of their populations that resides in the border zones. These are the people who must endure the exogenously-induced threats, with little assistance from their national and local governments beyond military and police actions. In the meantime, they have made what adjustments they can: some people have left , tired of the stresses and dangers; others simply await the future. Read more.
The MexicoBlog of the CIP Americas Program monitors and analyzes international press on Mexico with a focus on the US-backed War on Drugs in Mexico and the struggle in Mexico to strengthen the rule of law, justice and protection of human rights. Relevant political developments in both countries are also covered.
Showing posts with label border wall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label border wall. Show all posts
Feb 3, 2012
Immigration and the Border: Tearing down the walls of hostility
Beautiful, powerful statement from the peaceful Mennonites
Mennonite Weekly: "I stood on the hill in the twilight in Nogales, Ariz., looking down over the U.S.-Mexico border wall into Mexico. How broken our relationships must be in order to make necessary a wall like this one, 20 feet high for hundreds of miles. I was with a group of staff from Mennonite Central Committee from all over the Americas who had gathered in Tucson to strategize our future work together to help tear down this wall." read more
Mennonite Weekly: "I stood on the hill in the twilight in Nogales, Ariz., looking down over the U.S.-Mexico border wall into Mexico. How broken our relationships must be in order to make necessary a wall like this one, 20 feet high for hundreds of miles. I was with a group of staff from Mennonite Central Committee from all over the Americas who had gathered in Tucson to strategize our future work together to help tear down this wall." read more
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