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The Border
By David J. Danelo
Stackpole Press, 2008, $
ISBN # 978-0-8117-0393-2
www.stackpolebooks.com
by Andrew Lubin
Is the Mexican-American border defensible? Should it be?
These are questions that our politicians in Washington
should be asking, but are not, so former Marine David Danelo
drove the 1,951.63 mile border from the Gulf of Mexico’s
Boca Chica, Texas to Border Field State Park on California’s
Pacific coast, and he asks the questions for us.
Danelo took three months driving along both sides of the
border, and his interviews and observations illuminate the
growing divide between the two countries, and also whether
or not the real crisis is immigration or narcotics. Talking
with citizens of both Mexico and the United States in the
major border cities of Matamoros – Laredo – Ciudad Juarez –
Nogales- and San Diego, he personalizes the situation with a
series of interviews with Border Patrol agents local
sheriff’s, church groups, Minutemen, various American and
Mexican citizens, and even a couple of Mexican teenagers who
were about to be deported.
It is when talking to these young men, and a Mormon couple
in Arizona, that Danelo cuts to the heart of the matter “why
do Americans hate us so much,” the teenager asks, “why do
they pay us so much to work for them, and then kick us out?”
An interesting question, to be sure, and especially when
posed to the couple who run a restaurant in Arizona. The
husband and wife find themselves torn between wanting to
obey American immigration law, yet troubled that not only do
American teenagers refuse work as busboys and dishwashers,
but that they are breaking the law by providing work that
gives hope, dignity, and survival to otherwise impoverished
individuals. These are good questions, and ones whose
eventual answers will help provide solutions to the problem.
The immigration question is a complex one, and Danelo
touches on its many facets. The issues are a combination of
economics, growth of the ‘narcotraficantes’ and the recent
orgy of ‘narco-killings’, cultural change as American
demographics morph from Anglo to Latino…all of which is due
to a slowly failing state (Mexico) whose citizens are
fleeing by the hundreds of thousands for a better life.
Similar to situation in Iraq, where peace came only after
the Iraqi government became engaged with their own citizens,
the immigration situation must include the Mexican
government becoming more engaged in resolving those
conflicts that otherwise send its citizens walking north.
The first 535 copies of “The Border” printed should be
delivered to our congressmen and senators. This is a book
that discusses immigration without a political slant, which
makes it a rarity in these days of Lou Dobbs-led hysteria.
“The Border” is an impartial, honest, and well-written
synposis of the situation on the border; Danelo asks all the
right questions - now let’s see if anyone in Washington can
provide an equally thoughtful answer.
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