Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Stand And Deliver - Building The Wall : Do It and Do It Now!

Why all the hand wringing over building a barrier to stop terrorist and criminals from coming into our country? All that is required to build the fence, a wall, a barrier on our boarder is to say and believe, 'we can build the fence. We are building great buildings, curing diseases, and sending people to the moon, we can and will build a barrier on our boarder, a wall to stop illegal immigration.'

We can't find some engineers to design a wall that will stop the illegals? How did the Israelis do it?

This is about national security. This is not just about stopping terrorists and criminals from infiltrating our society as Barack has stated he wanted on so many occasions, but also stopping illegals from all over the world from destroy entire communities with chaotic financial and medical demands the communities cannot afford or want.

It's way past time to stop the hand wringing and do the job like the people who voted last November said they wanted their newly elected officials to do and said they would if elected. It's time to stand and deliver.

Build the wall and do it now!!

See Where Fencing Has Yet to Be Built Along Mexico Border
Josh Siegel / /     

The U.S. government has built fencing along roughly one-third of the 1,933-mile southern border with Mexico. The border state with the longest boundary—Texas, at about 1,241 miles—is covered by only 115 miles of fencing.

Data obtained by The Daily Signal shows there is plenty of space for President-elect Donald Trump to make good on his campaign promise to build a wall between the U.S. and Mexico.
170110_border-length-fence_v3But according to experts, physical barriers are only one component of border security, and Trump could encounter similar challenges to his predecessors in trying to construct a wall—or more likely, additional fencing—across complicated, unpredictable terrain.

Trump and congressional Republicans say they could use a 2006 law signed by President George W. Bush called the Secure Fence Act that mandated a minimum of 700 miles of “physical barrier” on the southern border without specifying any particular location where fencing must be built. The law was never fully implemented, and it did not set a deadline for the fencing to be built, meaning Trump could pick up where Bush left off.

The incoming administration just needs money from Congress to do it. “We’re going to build a wall,” Trump reiterated in his first press conference as president-elect on Wednesday. “I don’t feel like waiting a year or a year and a half. We’re going to start building.”

According to Customs and Border Protection, an agency of the Department of Homeland Security, there is currently about 654 miles of fencing along the border. Christiana Coleman, a spokeswoman for Customs and Border Protection, told The Daily Signal 36 miles of that fencing is double-layered and 14 miles have three layers. Coleman said the fencing consists of roughly 350 miles of single-layer pedestrian fences, most which stand about 18 feet, and 300 miles of low-level vehicle barriers that can be easily bypassed by pedestrians. The fencing is not continuous. The last segment of the fencing was built in 2014, she said.

The government is obligated by statute to reach the 700-mile floor, meaning it must still build nearly 50 additional miles of fencing at minimum. A recent report by the Congressional Research Service stated that under the law, the government can build beyond the required 700 miles. Trump has said that he would not seek to build a wall, or fencing, across the entirety of the nearly 2,000-mile border. He said he envisions the wall covering about half the border because of “natural barriers.”
170110_fencing-levels

Trump has estimated the cost of the wall to be from $8 billion to $12 billion. Other estimates have put the cost at $25 billion.
Coleman noted that challenging terrain and other considerations require alternative border security tools, such as “virtual fence” technology using towers, manned and unmanned aircraft, and surveillance sensors.

Building a wall or fence in Texas is especially difficult because U.S. citizens privately own about two-thirds of the border in the state, according to a Government Accountability Office report. The government would have to purchase land from Texans to build on it.

During his confirmation hearing this week, John F. Kelly, a retired Marine Corps general who is Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Homeland Security, emphasized these constraints, saying that “a physical barrier in and of itself will not do the job,” and added, “it has to be really a layered defense.”

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