6 ways the border wall could disrupt the environment.
PEOPLE WHO LIVE and work along the southern border of the U.S. will tell you that the farther away the political debate occurs from the border, the more detached it becomes from the reality of life in the borderlands. That long-held view has been confirmed yet again as the wrangling in Washington over President Donald Trumps demand for $5.7 billion to build a wall along the border devolves into an argument over whether such a wall should be concrete slab or steel slats.
The reason to build a wall is to keep people out. Yet history is replete with examples of walls all over the globe that rarely deterred determined people from getting in. Janet Napolitano, who served as governor of Arizona and President Barack Obamas secretary of Homeland Security, was famous for her oft-repeated declaration: Show me a 50-foot wall, and Ill show you a 51-foot ladder. The wisdom of building a wall across the length of the U.S.-Mexico border at a time when the number of arrests of illegal border crossers is at a 45-year low is an issue for the debate over immigration law.
1. Threatening diverse landscapes
2. Exacerbating flooding
3. Perils to wildlife and plants
4. Dividing a river
5. Disrupting wildlife refuges and parks
6. Exemption from environmental oversight laws
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/environment/2019/01/how-trump-us-mexico-border-wall-could-impact-environment-wildlife-water/?fbclid=IwAR1xyyeFtRcQB3iVg1bkiy-n-_dpj7DYmrdxw2HhOx9lpRKvpAfqMLj6_Uc