TP. 138 THE WALL 2

Building the 1,954 mile wall between Mexico and the United States is a huge undertaking. As of 2024, an estimated 600 miles of walls were installed, by which 458 miles were put in during Darling Donny’s watch. Most of these miles were replacements for older, lower walls, so…. maybe 50 miles of brilliant new barriers went up in Arizona to the orchestrated cost of $15 billion. The most trespassed section of the border occurs in Texas along the Rio Grande River, where nothing was built. Due to the river’s variable flow rate and flood plain laws, the wall in this section may have to be built up to a mile north of the border, creating access problems for landowners. All this could be rectified by building major chemical plants along the entire length of the river. Dow, Albemarle, and BASF, along with petrochemical refineries, such as ExxonMobil and Chevron Phillips, would love to build new plants with river access in areas with no environmental restraints. All wastes could be dumped in the Rio Grande directly, creating an acid bath that would dissolve any and all border jumpers with no prejudice whatsoever. With no guards required and well-lit chemical refineries lining the entire 1,000 mile US/Mexico river border, expensive, ugly barriers will be a thing of the past. In time, the acids and caustics flowing to the Gulf of Mexico will eat a scenic, deep canyon with bright chemical hues that will warrant a place as a US National Park and attract tourists who want to watch nature carving out an impressive canyon and, as a bonus, viewing human bodies dissolving. Problem solved with a profitable outcome to boot.

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