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originally posted by: amazing
originally posted by: Propagandalf
a reply to: amazing
A wall/fence by itself is nothing.
That's not quite true, especially if you look at it from the perspective of someone considering joining a caravan, walking thousands of miles, knowing that at the end lies a 30-50 ft wall. It's massive deterrent.
And there's a point to that. I think most people understand there is a fence and border patrol and it's not easy to cross. But look at places where a wall could be considered to be a success, like Israel. Their border with the Palestinian territories is not just wall. They have towers and listening posts, all kinds of surveillance measures and drones and armed guards and stuff I haven't even mentioned here. A wall by itself would be useless there. Same with our Mexican border.
originally posted by: Peeple
a reply to: FilthyUSMonkey
Point. Or just say 3145 km. Or if you really have to 3.145
originally posted by: Xcalibur254
a reply to: AboveBoard
In Europe the use of decimals and commas is reversed from what it is in America.
I'm kind of amazed this is the first time I've seen people have an issue with the difference on this site.
originally posted by: FilthyUSMonkey
originally posted by: amazing
originally posted by: Propagandalf
a reply to: amazing
A wall/fence by itself is nothing.
That's not quite true, especially if you look at it from the perspective of someone considering joining a caravan, walking thousands of miles, knowing that at the end lies a 30-50 ft wall. It's massive deterrent.
And there's a point to that. I think most people understand there is a fence and border patrol and it's not easy to cross. But look at places where a wall could be considered to be a success, like Israel. Their border with the Palestinian territories is not just wall. They have towers and listening posts, all kinds of surveillance measures and drones and armed guards and stuff I haven't even mentioned here. A wall by itself would be useless there. Same with our Mexican border.
Once again, this is really outside of the scope of this thread. This thread is not about if walls are effective, but the mechanics of building a wall after Congressional authorizeation has occured.
Anything to add to the topic?
originally posted by: amazing
originally posted by: FilthyUSMonkey
originally posted by: amazing
originally posted by: Propagandalf
a reply to: amazing
A wall/fence by itself is nothing.
That's not quite true, especially if you look at it from the perspective of someone considering joining a caravan, walking thousands of miles, knowing that at the end lies a 30-50 ft wall. It's massive deterrent.
And there's a point to that. I think most people understand there is a fence and border patrol and it's not easy to cross. But look at places where a wall could be considered to be a success, like Israel. Their border with the Palestinian territories is not just wall. They have towers and listening posts, all kinds of surveillance measures and drones and armed guards and stuff I haven't even mentioned here. A wall by itself would be useless there. Same with our Mexican border.
Once again, this is really outside of the scope of this thread. This thread is not about if walls are effective, but the mechanics of building a wall after Congressional authorizeation has occured.
Anything to add to the topic?
I think it's on topic as this relates to the question...what is a wall? and What kind of wall do we need? Is a fence enough? Do we have money for all of the other more important things relating to the wall...like towers, cameras, drones, listening posts/sensors, etc. You can't talk about Mechanics of building a wall without defining what is the wall. And that's where I think this topic has to go. You get 5 billion for a wall..great. Does that include all the other stuff, if not. How big is that wall now?
The first draft Homeland Security specifications for the wall is that it be either a solid concrete wall or a see–through structure, “physically imposing in height,” ideally 30 feet high but no less than 18 feet, sunk at least six feet into the ground to prevent tunneling under it; that it should not be scalable with even sophisticated climbing aids; and that it should withstand prolonged attacks with impact tools, cutting tools, and torches. The cost of the wall is estimated at $21.6 billion.(2)
originally posted by: Xcalibur254
a reply to: AboveBoard
In Europe the use of decimals and commas is reversed from what it is in America.
I'm kind of amazed this is the first time I've seen people have an issue with the difference on this site.