Securing the border in Douglas/Tom Barry |
Border security is – from a distance – a no brainer. The border line needs to be secured.
But the closer you get to the U.S.-Mexico border line, border
security policy seems more simplistic than simple.
The Douglas, Arizona – Agua Preita, Sonora port-of-entry is
within my sight as I write this morning. It’s a brisk spectacularly clear and beautiful
morning in Douglas (and in Agua Prieta).
I am sitting outside a new coffee shop, which , unlike anywhere else in
this town of 12,000, has free wi-fi!
Border Patrol trucks line up in the drive-through. Contemporary Latino music is a welcome
reminder that this isn’t Starbucks. Shakira’s “Loca, Loca, Loca,” adding a pulsing
edge to my caffeine high.
Loca (Loca)
No te pongas bruto
Loca.
Caffenio,this appealing coffee shop, is new to Douglas. It’s part of a new chain of cross-over
coffee shops owned by a Mexican company from Hermosillo, about five hours south
of the border.
The divide between north and south is so stark. The dividing line is no longer a simple line,
where one country ends and another begins. Over the past several years, the
national boundary has become a non-stop construction zone.
In populated areas, like Douglas-Agua Prieta, the famous 15-18. ft.
steel border fence – less a fence than a wall – now lays behind rows of accompanying border security fortifications – what the
Border Patrol calls “tactical infrastructure.” Another impossibly high fence, concrete moats,
and orange vehicle barriers now parallel the actual border, overseen by rows of
stadium lights and surveillance towers.
Behind these new lines of security are stationed dozens of the
omnipresent green-and-white Border Patrol vehicles and their olive-green uniformed
agents. They occupy a border zone they
have declared their owned. Taking photos
is a security risk, and I need to show my passport and move on.
Coming back from Agua Prieta last night, the Customs and
Border Protection (CBP) agent at the crossing didn’t take kindly to me. I noticed a more aggressive posture after he
had looked in the trunk.
It may have been the “Enjoy Life. Life is Not a Dress
Rehearsal” bumper stick on my car. It’s
a car my spouse normally drives, and I have tried to persuade her to remove the
bumper reminder of what life should be, arguing that it’s viewed as an
ideological statement by the border sheriffs, prison officials, and the
diversity of federal border security forces.
“What did you do in Mexico?”
“What kind of work do you do?”
(Was telling him I was a writer and worked for a Washington,
DC policy institute a mistake?)
“Where are you going this evening?”
“What are you bringing back from Mexico?” (A trick
question.)
“Nothing,“ I unthinkingly reply to the last question. (Wrong.)
“That’s not the case. You haven’t declared that bottle
of wine in your back seat”
“But I didn’t buy it (which was near empty from enjoying
life the night before) in Mexico.”
“That’s not what I asked you. I said, what are you bringing
from Mexico. And you are clearly bringing that liquor from Mexico.”
“Yes, that’s true. But I am also am bringing my camera, my
sleeping bag, my notebook.” (Did I, the
self-identified writer, really want to argue about language and meaning with
this stern, calm, but clearly raging border guard? But what should I have said –
that ”you are so right” sir?
He closes his station, and I think about the frustrated drivers
waiting in line behind me while accompanying him to “secondary inspection.”
A half-dozen or more CBP agents stand idle, while my guard,
who may have identified me as an atheist by my partner’s “No Dress Rehearsal” bumper
sticker (the border now breeds delusion and paranoia, and I may not be exempt)
oversees an exhaustive inspection of the car.
Leaving the hood up, the car doors open, I am told that I
can leave.
Loca, Loca, Loca.
No te pongas bruto.
This is border security, which is increasingly crazy, ideological, brutal,
and insanely expensive.
Our friends from APSon complain about how difficult it has become to be a fronterizo. They describe a militarized border similar to the one Tijuana has had to put up with for more than twenty years now.
ReplyDeleteThings were different during the previous Prohibition. Here's a shot of the two Nogaleses taken by México Fotográfico during the late 1920s. In the middle ground you can see the Customs checkpoints.
http://i55.tinypic.com/t0i2vl.jpg