Well, what has the past taught us about walls? The Chinese built a wall to keep Manchurian invaders out of the country, and we all know how that turned out. The Berlin wall divided East and West Germany; East Germany wanted to prevent Western fascists from invading the country and individuals from defecting to the West. The Berlin wall eventually fell. It’s possible that a wall isn’t the answer.
The Secure Fence Act of 2006 gave us nearly 700 miles of fence along the southern U.S. border. President George W. Bush signed the bill to make the border more secure and protect the American people. It allows double-layered fencing in some areas of the border, cameras, and sensors (Valverde). Instead of building a massive wall, work could be done to maintain the existing fences and keep them in good shape. More border patrol can be enforced in the more remote areas of the border, especially where gaps are present, as well as around-the-clock surveillance.
Our nation is a divided one; half of us condone President Trump’s great wall, while the other half condemn Mr. Trump for even thinking about building one in the first place. Walls have proven to be inefficient in the past. Robert Frost taught us that walls do not make good neighbors. We are a nation built by immigrants after