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br> Re: Gene Healy's Don't Militarize the Borders : /p>I will remind Mr. Gene Healy who wrote the article "Don't Militarize the Borders" that for some fifty years the U.S. Army has been on guard duty at South Korea's border with the North. How is it that for a half century our military has been an effective border guard on the Korean peninsula, yet it would be so terribly ineffective on the U.S. border? The United States suffers the "invasion" of 125,000 illegal immigrants across our southern border every month. This is an attack upon the U.S., and, in effect, it is war.
p>Let us immediately bring home to the United States the 37,000 effective border guards from Korea and put them on the border in Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, and California. br> -- Bill Tucker br> Ferguson, MO /p> p> Gene Healy's "Don't Militarize the Borders" demonstrates a lack of understanding of the problems on our borders. Americans along our southern border are terrorized every day by illegal immigrant criminals while the Bush Administration looks the other way. Simply strengthening the Border Patrol and INS is an idea that has come and gone. Ten years ago it might have been adequate but not now. As Canada has an extremely open immigration policy with Middle Eastern countries, the northern border will have to be watched with greater vigilance too. As Mr. Healy is a shill for the open borders Cato Institute, going to him for advice on border security is like going to George McGovern for advice on defense policy at the height of the Cold War. Immigration Policy and National Security are too important to this country's survival to be left to libertarians who would leave us vulnerable to attack. br> -- John Kenney /p> p> I agree with your position and would like to add that you didn't mention the flip side of the issue. After you train military people to assume law enforcement duties, they are no longer warriors (soldiers).