The liberty principle for this
Freedom Friday is that fences make good neighbors. Fences give boundaries for
children, pets, teenagers, and adults. Glenn Beck shared his experience of
going to his ranch and building/repairing fences with his fifteen-year-old son.
You know what we need to do with Mexico?
Mend fences.
Now, that’s a phrase. You hear build a
wall. That’s horrible.
No, no, no. We need to mend fences….
So you mend fences, which means, keep
your stuff on your side. I like you. We’re good neighbors. You keep your stuff
on your side and I’ll keep my stuff on my side and we’ll get together at the
town hall and we’ll see each other at the grocery store.
Because we’re good
neighbors. But what stops us from fighting is knowing that there is a fence
there.
This is my stuff. That’s your stuff. But
we can still trade and we’ll help each other. But let’s stop talking about
building a wall. Because that has all kinds of negative imagery. Mending fences
is what we need to do.
You can have a tough fence. It could be
a giant wall. It could be an electric fence. But you need one. And that’s how
you come together.
Beck used the analogy of repairing
fences on his ranch in order to keep his cows from entering the property of his
neighbor. He was also referring to the importance of have a fence along the
southern border. Mexico and the United States can work together for the good of
both nations, but there needs to be a fence along the property line.
The “stuff” that a fence would keep
out of the United States is human trafficking, illegal drugs, and crime. The
fence would also act as a boundary to people who might wander across the border
aimlessly in search of a better life. I agree with Beck when he says that
mending the fence with Mexico – or building a barrier – would help the
neighboring nations to be more neighborly.
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