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Great Wall Of America A Bad Idea. Research Paper

Great Wall of America? A Bad Idea. It is widely known that the United States is a country of immigrants. The country's indigenous population constitutes a tiny miniscule of its population, while the rest came mostly from Europe, Latin America, and other parts of the world. Nevertheless, immigration to the United States has always been a divisive and controversial issue. In the nineteenth century, nativist feelings among the WASP (White Anglo-Saxon Protestants) made the East Coast a very inhospitable place for Catholic Irish immigrants, while the legislators in the West Coast targeted immigrants and migrants from the Far East, singling out the Chinese in the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 ("Chinese Exclusion Act"). Today, cross-border movement of people through the southern border of the United States has become a hotly debated issue for ordinary folks, legislators, anti-terrorist law enforcement agencies, Congressmen and Congresswomen as well as Presidential candidates. Criticizing the current state of border control as some form of "open border anarchy," many conservative politicians -- in collaboration with numerous so-called "liberals" -- argue that the border with Mexico should be sealed with a wall. Dubbed "The Great Wall of America," the proposed wall, however, is a bad idea as it is a costly project that will not stop illegal immigration; it endangers the safety of migrants and the ecosystem of the surrounding areas, and is against American ideals.

The wall which the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) started building in 2006 would stretch along the 2,000-mile border between the United States and Mexico. The plan was to build a 700-mile long fence equipped with sensors, radar, towers, intense lights, and other high-tech surveillance equipment. The projected...

Not only did the project fail to protect the border, but sealing the border will not stop desperate people searching for better opportunities. The Berlin Wall built at the height of the Cold War and guarded with live ammunition failed to prevent 5,000 East Germans from moving to West Germany, whereas in the areas with Mexico border where fence had already been built journalists observed grandmotherly women and pre-teenage children smuggling goods across the border (Drehle). In short, "The Great Wall of America" is too costly and is ineffective.
The wall is also problematic because it makes the lives of migrants miserable, forcing them to risk their health and even life to do the business their livelihood depends on. Proponents of the border fence ignore the fact that the migration of workers from Mexico to the United States is driven by a variety of circumstances, including the signing of NAFTA (which flooded Mexico with cheap, government-subsidized American corn, driving over a million Mexicans out of business) and the direct attempts by American meat companies to lure undocumented Mexican workers to the United States (Kenner et al.). Supporters of…

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Works Cited:

"Chinese Exclusion Act." Harvard University Library Open Collections Program. Web. 14 March 2012 <http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/immigration/exclusion.html>

"Environmental Rules Waived for Border Fence." Associated Press. 15 January 2007. Web. 14 March 2012 <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16635054/ns/us_news-environment/t/environmental-rules-waived-border-fence/#>

Drehle, David Von. "The Great Wall of America." Time. 19 June 2008. Web. 14 March 2012 <http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1816488,00.html>

Kenner, Robert, et al. Food, Inc. Los Angeles, CA: Magnolia Home Entertainment, 2009.
Powell, Stewart. "$1B Border Fence Boondoggle." Times Union, 23 January 2011. Web. 14 March 2012 <http://www.timesunion.com/news/article/1B-border-fence-boondoggle-972366.php>
Rodriguez, Richard. "The 'Great Wall of America' and the Threat from Within." Los Angeles Times. 5 September 2010. Web. 14 March 2012 <http://articles.latimes.com/print/2010/sep/05/opinion/la-oe-rodriguez-border-20100905>
"U.S. Border Fence 'an Eco-danger.'" BBC Online. 31 July 2007. Web. 14 March 2012 <http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6924475.stm>
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