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  • This is what part of the U.S. and Mexico border

  • looked like in 1898, just an open strip of land with train

  • tracks going across.

  • Here’s what that same stretch looked like 110 years later,

  • in 2008.

  • The open land is split by a fence.

  • A border gate replaces the train tracks.

  • So how did we get herefrom open desert

  • to a patchwork of highly politicized border barriers?

  • To understand, were going to focus mostly

  • on a single location, in Nogales,

  • the spot where this stone monument marks

  • the border line.

  • What happens here tells the story of the border’s

  • transformation, the how and the why.

  • Well begin in 1848.

  • The United States has just defeated Mexico

  • in a war over expansion.

  • Mexico is forced to sign away more than half its land

  • and sell a bit more later on.

  • This is how the U.S. got the land which

  • includes today’s border, but there’s no fences

  • or barriers yet.

  • No.

  • First the border just gets marked, in many places

  • with nothing more than a pile of stones.

  • These stones are at the spot I mentioned

  • that were going to focus on, outside a saloon in Nogales.

  • The saloon is on the U.S. side.

  • There’s essentially free movement back and forth.

  • But these rocks hardly mark the border accurately.

  • The border stays like that for 43 years until 1891.

  • That’s when the U.S. and Mexico set out

  • to define the border with better accuracy.

  • Stone monuments go up at regular intervals

  • to clearly mark it.

  • If we go back to the saloon, Monument 122

  • stands where the pile of rocks once was.

  • The monument will remain, but the saloon will be torn down.

  • Why?

  • In 1897, the president orders that several buildings

  • be demolished in order to clear a 60-foot-wide path

  • along the border.

  • Mexico has already done this.

  • The path is cleared to make smuggling easier to spot.

  • Not drug smugglingthis is smuggling of everyday goods

  • to avoid import and export taxes.

  • The new tract of open land also

  • emphasizes the growing separation

  • between Mexico and the U.S.

  • Still, there’s no border fence in Nogales, not yet.

  • But in rural areas, there’s a problem only a border fence

  • can solve: ticks.

  • In the early 1900s, ticks are causing disease

  • among cows in rural areas.

  • Those cows are crossing back and forth over the border.

  • So the first-ever border fence is actually

  • built to keep cows from spreading disease.

  • But what about the first fence meant

  • to control human movement?

  • There are three big reasons the U.S. invests

  • in more security at the southern border,

  • culminating in the first permanent fence.

  • Number 1, racist attitudes towards Chinese people

  • had led to law banning their immigration to the U.S.

  • The law was enforced mainly at water ports,

  • but less so on the Mexican border.

  • So going through Mexico became an easier way

  • Chinese people could avoid the ban and still enter the U.S.

  • But the large number of people showing up

  • along the southern border eventually

  • drew stricter security.

  • Then in 1910, a revolution breaks out in Mexico.

  • That leads to reason Number 2 for a security buildup.

  • The U.S. sends troops to the border

  • to stop the fighting from spilling over.

  • Here’s that monument I showed you earlier,

  • where the saloon once was, this time in 1913.

  • Then

  • World War I — reason Number 3

  • for the security buildup.

  • U.S. troops stay on the border.

  • There’s paranoia in America that German spies might cross

  • over from the Mexican side.

  • All this violence and intrigue creates a tense atmosphere

  • on the border.

  • Small gunbattles erupt between jittery American and

  • Mexican forces.

  • Each side blames the other.

  • So here’s where the first permanent border fence

  • to manage human crossings

  • comes to be, in 1918.

  • It’s made of wirevery basic.

  • You could easily climb over the fence if you wanted to.

  • But its purpose isn’t to wall off the two countries.

  • The fence is a way to diffuse the tension

  • and control the flow of growing border traffic.

  • Then, Prohibition happens.

  • Alcohol is legal in Mexico.

  • So yeah, a lot of American visitors go there.

  • The U.S. monitors crossings to enforce

  • the regulation of American morality,

  • as one researcher puts it.

  • Also, population along the border

  • is growing, so we see the border fence get enhancements

  • in the late 1920s.

  • It’s got barbed wire at the top.

  • Lampposts are installed.

  • New stone pillars form crossing gates.

  • Prohibition gives way to the Depression and then

  • World War II.

  • Here’s where the U.S. starts to use barriers to really

  • keep people out.

  • A program is bringing Mexican workers into the U.S.

  • to beef up the wartime labor force.

  • The term most commonly used is Braceros.”

  • But at the same time, other Mexicans

  • without authorization to enter the U.S.

  • sneak across the border anyway, looking for jobs.

  • This photo shows a U.S. border agent

  • demonstrating how easy people can get

  • through a rural border fence.

  • So all of this leads to more fences and more border patrols.

  • The racial slur in this newsreel title

  • shows the prejudice towards Mexican workers

  • during this time.

  • The U.S. places more restrictions

  • on Mexican immigration in the following decades.

  • That begins a cycle that continues to this day.

  • Less ways to legally enter the U.S.

  • means more people crossing the border illegally,

  • which leads to more deportations.

  • To build stronger border barriers,

  • the U.S. uses surplus from the Vietnam War.

  • See right here:

  • It’s a helicopter landing mat.

  • Mats like these line the border in the 1990s.

  • Meanwhile, the U.S. is increasing roundups

  • of undocumented immigrants.

  • There is too much of it, and we must do much more

  • to stop it.”

  • Then we come to Sept. 11.

  • That brings strong bipartisan support

  • for more border security.

  • This bill will make our borders more secure.”

  • And the length of the border wall expands to five times

  • what it was, even though the number of illegal crossings

  • are going down.

  • We have more of everything

  • ICE, Border Patrol, surveillance, you name it.”

  • Border security remains a huge rallying cry.

  • Weve got to have a wall.

  • If we don’t have a wall, it’s never going to end.”

  • “A wall is an immorality.

  • It’s not who we are as a nation.”

  • And so the debate continues.

  • That’s how we got here.

  • Barriers have existed along the border for a long time,

  • but their purpose has been ever-changing.

  • So five minutes into the video,

  • you saw how Vietnam-era landing mats were

  • used to help construct the border fence.

  • But there’s another surprising material that was also used:

  • During World War II, the U.S. forcibly

  • confined people of Japanese ancestry to internment camps.

  • Those camps had fences, and some of those fences

  • were reused later on to build the Mexican border fence.

  • This time not to keep people in,

  • but to keep people out.

This is what part of the U.S. and Mexico border

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米メキシコ国境の壁はいかにしてできたのか|NYTニュース (How Walls Ended Up Along the U.S.-Mexico Border | NYT News)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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