NOTES:
When the rule of law is absent it is almost impossible to achieve real progress.
“A wall” will not solve this problem.
In 2011, the last year for which there are solid statistics, the direct impact of all illegal drug use on the U.S. healthcare system was estimated at $11 billion, and it is much higher now.
I bring a law enforcement point of view, but I also come to this topic as a philanthropist whose foundation has spent hundreds of millions of dollars supporting development and humanitarian projects in countries that are overwhelmed by conflict and injustice, including Mexico and the Northern Triangle countries of El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras.
Border security and immigration are connected to U.S. food security. It is concerning that U.S. agriculture relies on tens of thousands of undocumented workers to harvest our food.
Almost inevitably, where there is poverty and hunger, there is violence.
From 2000 to 2012, Warner estimates they had about sixty people per day, but sometimes as many as two hundred people per day, hiking across their land, stopping to rest and eat, and then continuing on for miles to interstate highways to get picked up.
Law enforcement must maintain good communication and relationships of trust with undocumented community members in support of public safety. Local law enforcement’s top priority must be apprehending dangerous, violent individuals. Confusion in an immigrant community about whether local police also are operating as federal immigration enforcement can have serious and negative consequences.
The people profiting from America’s addictions and drug use are not just going to give up if drugs that currently bring them huge sums of money are legalized; they will adapt, and they will continue to prey on anyone they feel they can exploit.
I confess: I didn’t want to write this chapter about whether we should build “a” or “the” wall to improve border security. It was frustrating to me to listen to Donald Trump’s campaign rhetoric in 2016 about some “big beautiful” wall that Mexico would pay for. At first, I thought that talk was mostly symbolic and just meant to signal that he was focusing on improving border security, which I support. But focusing on the wall became a way for Trump to insult Mexico, which is the opposite of what the United States needs to do if we are ever going to achieve border security. Talk about making Mexico pay for it was unproductive and ridiculous, and it set back years of progress between our countries. We will never secure the border without the support and cooperation of the Mexican government. Period.
Most Americans have no idea what true poverty is like in the developing world, or what it is like to be surrounded by violence and be unable to turn to local police.
Our foundation has spent nearly two decades investing in efforts to help small farmers improve their crop yields and increase the level of their families’ health and income. I’ve also visited over twenty refugee camps from Darfur to Yemen to Latvia. To leave everything you own, everything you love, everything you know in order to seek asylum is a radical, risky decision. I don’t believe people do it for any other reason than survival.
The essence of the rule of law is that it must be applied consistently and that no one, and no organization or agency, is above it. Without acceptance of that fundamental principle in a society, justice is unreliable, and you cannot bring violence under control.
Many see the Mexican military as the only entity with the resources and standards to go after and respond to cartels.
As a law enforcement advocate, I believe that massive decriminalization of all drugs would take too big a toll on innocent people over too long a period, and I also believe it would trigger many negative unintended consequences.
Mexico’s legal system is so weak, the prosecution rate is 5 percent. How do you fix problems when you have a 95 percent chance of escaping prosecution or punishment when you commit a crime?
One thing I know for sure: Insulting, bullying, or belittling Mexico will never help us improve border security. To help Mexico change for the better, we need to change as well. We need to treat the Mexican government as a partner and help it stabilize the country, drive out the criminal element, and achieve better security for us both.
There is a U.S. law important to the border challenge that dates back to 1878. It’s called the Posse Comitatus Act, and it prohibits U.S. military services from enforcing domestic laws. It’s a vital concept in a democracy: Misuse of military forces on domestic soil is a common tactic of despots and dictators. The military should defend the country from foreign threats and never treat U.S. citizens, even when they have broken the law, as an enemy to be put down first and asked questions later.
Tijuana, Mexico - according to the San Diego Union Tribune - Millions of commercial vehicles carrying billions of dollars in legal goods drive back and forth across the border every year, and if CBP were to search every vehicle thoroughly, the delays would cripple many businesses on both sides of the border.
Three fallacies to tackle head-on:
1. The idea that the majority of people crossing our borders today are Mexican criminals is wrong.
2. We cannot ignore the historical role Mexican laborers, both undocumented and documented, play in our agricultural economy. They are not “stealing our jobs.”
3. Threatening tariffs or other ill-considered ploys to force Mexico to “pay” for a wall is likely to backfire.
About 60 percent of unauthorized residents in the United States, according to the Migration Policy Institute, have been here for at least a decade.
In 2014, the number of non-Mexicans apprehended at U.S. borders began exceeding the number of Mexicans.
Our foundation has supported extensive research in this area, and I say with no hesitation that these are not jobs native-born U.S. workers have wanted to perform for decades.
An estimated 70 percent of crop workers in the United States were born in Mexico.
Some Americans still tend to see Mexico in a very superficial way: as a potential vacation destination, as the country of origin for many of our farm laborers and “illegals,” or in recent years as a country suffering extreme violence (and therefore to be avoided as a vacation destination!). This limited appreciation for the complexities of Mexico is making the larger goal of border security much more difficult.
The value of a dog trained to sniff drugs and chase and hold a suspect is enormous. The speed and determination of a canine to pursue a person on foot is an unrivaled asset that reduces the threat of harm to a law enforcement officer.
“There is nothing in the entire technological arsenal of planet Earth with a sensory capability superior to Fido’s nose.”
Persistent presence is not a technology; it is strategy that ensures no part of the border goes unprotected. Without persistent presence, you cannot achieve operational control.
We cannot pretend to care deeply about safety and the rule of law if U.S. businesses and individuals don’t accept the degree to which they have created an incentive for illegal immigration by hiring undocumented workers.
These days, many farmers are struggling to find enough labor to harvest crops, and that is a reminder of how vital foreign-born labor has been to our food supply.
We will never achieve sustained border security unless the United States supports the peace and security of other countries in our hemisphere. We must help reduce the gang violence and provide positive alternatives to gang involvement for young people in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Honduras in particular.
I travel to El Salvador and Colombia and Mexico to try to help vulnerable people, but also to better understand the threats our country is facing. We cannot wall ourselves off from the rest of the Western Hemisphere.
“You can give all manner of goods and services to the poor, but if you don’t restrain the hands of the violent bullies taking it all away, you’re going to be very disappointed in the long-term impact of your efforts.”
Obama administration tripled past budgets designed to help strengthen governance, root out corruption, and encourage foreign investments. We need more, not less of that kind of investment. We need our government to be smarter about how it approaches some of these challenges.