Like Scott Adams like to say, analogies are poor persuasion. People end up searching for holes in the logic. Lesson learned.Smitty-48 wrote:None the less, I don't find the Inner German Border to be a model for a realistic solution in the United States, Apples to Oranges, not to mention the Inner German Border is a failed model, if emulating the East Germans is what America has come to, that's not a good sign.Hastur wrote:The East Germans were like the frog in the slowly heating water at first. Probably thought it would work out somehow. I think a modern border would look a lot different but the point is that a nation need to protect its border if the difference is to big between nations. And the cost for not doing so far outweigh the price for doing it.Smitty-48 wrote:
Prior to erecting the so called "Modern Frontier" in 1967, there were only about 1,000 crossings of the Inner German Border annually, so contrary to popular myth, there weren't actually that many people attempting to escape the Iron Curtain.
Also note, the Inner German Border was only 800 miles long, there was a 5 kilometer deep Sperrzone beyond the fortifications, the protective strip was sowed with 1.3 million AP mines, and there were 50,000 Grenzpolizei guarding it at all times, and they shot 1200 people for attempting to cross.
In the end, by 1988, the Soviets and DDR came to the conclusion that the Modern Frontier was financially unsustainable, and at the time of the collapse of the Iron Curtain they were intending to replace it with a much more modest "Grenz 2000" program, which would have replaced the fortifications with remote sensors.
In the long perspective Mexico needs to be lifted up to a first world level of life quality but I’m not the person to tell how to get there. Having the most ambitious people leave is not a solution, that much I know.
America wants to stop people from entering, not leaving so there is a huge difference. The people trying to cross are Mexicans looking for jobs not Germans fleeing for their lives so nothing is the same. Shrug.