This latest in a series of reports on documents issued by
the Government Accountability Office is about Border Patrol agent assignments
in the Southwest, and it’s an eye-opener.
The link is: http://www.gao.gov/assets/690/688200.pdf?utm_medium=email&utm_source=govdelivery
I read this stuff so you don’t have to, and most of it is
forgotten immediately, but this one is interesting: As of May 2017, nationwide, Border Patrol had
about 1,900 fewer agents than authorized, which officials cited as a key
challenge for optimal agent deployment. In recent years, attrition has exceeded
hiring (an average of 904 agents compared to 523 agents) according to
officials.
It goes on to note that some 42% of individuals apprehended
while trying to cross the border were caught within a mile of the border itself
in 2016, while in 2012 that figure was 24%.
It also notes that part of the reason for that is the kids who are sent
across the border and told to surrender immediately, but it’s pretty obvious
that the main reason is the lack of agents.
If you’re running the border, your chances go way up if you make it the
first mile. Anybody want to ask if the
people who make money running the border pay attention to these reports?
So what the hell is going on in the ranks of the Border
Patrol that damn near double the number of agents they were able to hire quit
over the same period of time? Is this
why the idea of a wall is sounding good to some folks? Is it just the Southwest division, or is this
happening all over?
Personally, I think people ought to be able to go anywhere
they damn well please any time they want, and that borders are a particularly
vicious invention designed to keep the people of the world at each others’
throats, and not those of the ones who really run things, and make all the
profit. But I realize that the concept
of Open Borders is a futility until we solve the problem of why some people are
so desperate to get the hell away from where they were born at any cost.
That problem has proven to be a thorny one, indeed. Ah, but when we do solve it, when the entire
world is open to our visitation and exploration, when all the people who live
there are happy and comfortable and glad to see us, just like we are glad to
see them when they come to our town, wouldn’t that be wonderful indeed? What’s it going to take to make that happen?
:-{)}
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