Thursday, May 07, 2026

The Never-Ending Nightmare of the Border Wall



 May 4, 2026

Image by Getty and Unsplash+.

A leading preoccupation of the first Trump administration has all but slipped from view. Except when ostensible conservatives speak out against it, the major media have scarcely breathed a word on the subject. But it’s still there, 30 feet tall, aspirationally 1,952 miles long, obliterating habitats, dividing families, and sucking down public funds faster than a carrier-based air squadron.

The media’s lack of attention is understandable. All-too-real wars of choice and metaphorical wars against science, universities, and the environment have dominated our airtime and the headlines. The rise of a new medievalism in medicine and the abrogation of international trade and security agreements have also won attention. Add to all of that a federal paramilitary kidnapping people, even from what still passes for the halls of justice, while murdering the occasional protester, and one’s journalistic cup runneth over.

The meta-story of the U.S. government’s comprehensive abandonment of its Enlightenment heritage needs telling, too. Goodbye to empiricism and the troublesome scientific discourse it produces. Goodbye as well to empiricism’s political collaterals, including the “created equal” credo of the Declaration of Independence, which the current regime finds distinctly irritating. There is simply too much to report on as the new monarchy, as if in a sped-up nature film, blossoms flowerlike, its palace under renovation, the king’s signature being prepared to grace the currency, and myriad kickback mechanisms whirring like gold-plated turbines to enrich an aristocracy of tech bros and oil emirs.

So, dear reader, it’s not just logical but inevitable that Donald Trump’s border wall, a major story during his first administration, has essentially fallen out of the news. Rest assured, though, that the world’s least pragmatic and most performative construction project continues to prosper.

Spend Now, Think Later

Modern border management relies on three tools: human patrols, remote detection backed by quick response teams, and the construction of physical obstacles. Smart gatekeepers coordinate those tools to maximize effectiveness and minimize cost. But there’s no need for thrift in Trumpworld. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, or OBBBA, which Trump signed into law last July 4th, negated all need for fiscal restraint. Among other things, it appropriated $46.55 billion for border wall construction, $7.8 billion for U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents and their vehicles, $6.2 billion for high-tech border surveillance, and a hefty $10 billion for anything else border-related. The total: $70.55 billion. Those funds will be available through Fiscal Year 2029. By comparison, the government will spend about $10 billion less over that same period to fund the entire Department of the Interior, which manages half a billion acres of surface land as well as the continental shelf and vast subsurface mineral deposits.

Such border largesse means that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) can go all-out on all three tactical approaches at the U.S.-Mexico border — patrol, surveillance, and a wall — simultaneously, without troubling to eliminate redundancies, tailor tactics to the environment, or streamline coordination. Daddy has proudly given DHS his credit card.

In a victory-lap cabinet meeting four days after enacting the OBBBA, Trump told Kristi Noem, then still his DHS secretary, “You’re loaded up on the border.” He essentially admitted that the bill’s munificence demonstrated power, not budgetary acumen, simultaneously adding, “We had zero [migrants] come in last month, so I am not sure how much of it we want to spend. You may actually think about saving a lot of money because the wall is largely built.” The president then continued with fact-free claims that the migrant population abounded with murderers and mental defectives.

Notwithstanding Trump’s comments, DHS administrators and the contractors who are their most immediate constituents show no sign of leaving money on the table. At the border, their blank-check funding meets a matching regulatory void — the most extensive waiver of laws and regulations in American history. In addition to suspending laws intended to protect the environment, wildlife, national parks, national wildlife refuges, lands sacred to Native Americans, and historic and cultural sites, the Trump administration has also waived more than 60 contracting and procurement regulations. In the name of a national emergency, which is no emergency at all — illegal border crossings (as measured by apprehensions) have indeed plunged — the president has stripped the playing field of all boundaries and opened the door to cronyism and corruption.

Under showers of money and in the absence of restraint, a single border wall is no longer viewed as adequate. Double-walling has become the norm and certain select areas now boast triple walls. With no cap on costs, whole mountaintops, rugged and unvisited, have been sheared apart to make way for the standard 30-foot-tall, steel-bollard wall, even at costs exceeding $41 million per mile, or almost $8,000 per foot. Meanwhile, the Border Patrol’s terminally bored agents (giving new meaning to bored-er) sit behind the wall in white trucks, looking at their phones and incubating their hemorrhoids.

The Non-Monetary Costs Are No Less Astronomical

It’s easy to think of the mostly arid U.S.-Mexico border zone as empty, but biologically it’s a busy place. The grasslands of the San Rafael Valley in Arizona, for instance, are home to 17 threatened and endangered species.  For years, existing vehicle barriers, bolstered by remote detection technology, have allowed jaguars, ocelots, mountain lions, mule deer, and other wildlife to move back and forth across the valley’s 30 miles of border and disperse according to their ancient ways. A network of 60 remote cameras along that stretch, monitored by the Sky Island Alliance, recorded just one possible migrant per camera every 20 months. Besides being easily patrolled, the valley is also heart-stoppingly beautiful. Nonetheless, DHS intends to double-wall all of it. In addition to bifurcating the wildlife habitat and scarring a gemlike landscape, the wall builders will extract large amounts of groundwater to make concrete for the wall’s foundation, almost certainly desiccating wetlands that are hotspots of biodiversity. And for nothing, save symbolism, bragging rights, and contractor profits.

No detail illuminates the mentality behind border enforcement better than this: in cooperation with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, military elements at Fort Huachuca, Arizona, are now engaged in “the largest Concertina wire (C-wire) emplacement in U.S. territorial history.” “C-wire,” or “razor wire,” is designed to lacerate any flesh, human or animal, that comes in contact with it. Fort Huachuca soldiers are deploying 43,000 rolls of it, the largest single purchase ever.

Usually C-wire is used atop a wall or fence to prevent people from climbing over. Ominously, it’s now being spread on the ground, sometimes in areas where there is no wall, but also in front of the wall and between double walls — a policy of pure viciousness, not necessity. Someone should explain this deployment to the bighorn sheep of California’s Jacumba Mountains, which are now separated from their key Mexican waterhole by thickets of the nasty stuff, which will become ever more camouflaged and treacherous as grass and brush grow through it.

Buoy, Oh, Buoy, What a Wall!

For treachery, however, it’s hard to top CBP’s plans to “secure” 536 miles of the border in Texas by mooring a chain of cylindrical buoys, linked end to end, down the middle of the Rio Grande. Once in place, the array will look like an orange sausage, five feet in diameter, floating on the river. The anchors and mooring lines, of course, will be invisible. What could possibly go wrong?

This ill-conceived plan offers a retro-snapshot of American life before the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) became law in 1970, back when strip mines and other land-wrecking ventures could be launched with no evaluation of their impact, no public involvement, and no second opinions as to their necessity. The waiver of NEPA and every other environmental constraint means that no modeling of the “Buoy Wall’s” hydrodynamics (that is, its reaction to flooding), if any exists, has been made public.

The Rio Grande International Study Center in Laredo, Texas, however, commissioned its own study. The results are unequivocal. The Buoy Wall will be a debris trap during floods, as when a hurricane lodges over the region. It will redirect flows of water and raise water levels, especially in places where it’s paired with river-crowding segments of the wall. And if a section of buoys should break loose from the sandy, unstable riverbed, the likelihood of disaster will soar.

Geomorphologist Mark Tompkins, who authored the report, concludes, “Failures will cause catastrophic flooding, damage and destruction to property, and risks to the health and safety of people near the river corridor.” Thousands of people living adjacent to the river in Laredo and other communities in both Mexico and the U.S. will be put at risk.

Conflicts Brewed and Brewing

Walls have their place. They can be effective in urban areas. But DHS startled more than a few onlookers with plans to build a wall among the cliffs and arid wildlands of Big Bend National Park. Even the sheriffs of West Texas, one of the reddest regions in the country, got riled up. Although DHS may yet fall back to a more sensible “detection technology” alternative for the national park, it has failed to communicate a clear decision, while nearby private lands and Big Bend Ranch State Park remain at risk.

Even worse uncertainty may be brewing in Arizona, where the lands of the Tohono O’odham people, whose presence predates the border by many centuries, are spread on either side of the line. The tribe’s exemplary cooperation with border authorities includes tribal enforcement teams that have helped keep illegal crossings at a historic low. But the rigid minds and hungry contractors of the “CBP industrial complex” remain unsatisfied. The agency’s “smart wall map” indicates that it aims to build a double wall across the Tohono O’odham reservation, splitting apart families, clans, and longstanding webs of relationship.

And then there’s the unhappy Roman Catholic Diocese of Las Cruces, which serves Sunland Park, New Mexico. Walls have long separated El Paso and Sunland Park from the Mexican city of Ciudad Juárez. However, there is an unwalled gap at Monte Cristo Rey, a steep-sided peak long considered impractical for barrier construction. Not now, though. Blasting for the Border Wall began on Cristo Rey in March, in time to appall the thousands of Holy Week pilgrims who visit the statue of Christ the King on the mountain’s summit.

The land available to CBP, however, is not sufficient to finish the job on Cristo Rey, and the adjacent landowner, the Catholic Church, refuses to sell. CBP claims it may assert the right of eminent domain, while the church has said it will fight, although its best tool for resistance, the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, has predictably been among the many laws waived by DHS.

Orgasms for Birders

On a recent trip to the border, I visited one of the most exquisite places in the entire Southwest. To get to it, I drove 40 miles on dirt roads across broken, arroyo-carved desert. The Border Wall was almost always in sight.

Apart from the roadway itself, the commonest evidence of a human presence were signs at the approach to each arroyo: DO NOT ENTER WHEN FLOODED, which is good advice in an area where flash floods from local thunderstorms can sweep away a heavy truck. All the arroyos that the road crosses are also crossed by the Border Wall. Floods pile tons of debris against the wall and sometimes the accumulated weight is enough to push the structure down. CBP continues to experiment with designs for swinging water gates, but a durable solution remains unproven.

Between a pair of “lay-bys” — bulldozed flats where the wall contractor has assembled fleets of eighteen-wheelers, excavators, scrapers, dumpers, pickups, bulldozers, loaders, and cement trucks — I veered down a rough track to a steel gate and let myself in. A little way beyond that, I stopped my car beside a lazy creek at the bottom of a canyon. White-barked sycamores and cottonwoods, just coming into leaf, towered overhead. Amid their shadows, the air smelled of duff and wet sand. The birds were not just singing, they were yelling. When I opened a birding app on my phone, the bird-call IDs scrolled by like movie credits.

The canyon has a perfectly good name, but I’ll call it Paradox Canyon in recognition of the contrast between the vigorous life it contains and the brutalist-walled horizon looming above it. During the first Trump administration, the nearest mountain peak was cleaved open like a watermelon, leaving the landscape not just scarred but grotesquely amputated.

The current contractor, Fisher Industries, is no stranger to disassembling and rearranging mountains. Besides installing the standard bollard wall, Fisher is pouring a concrete patrol road at the foot of the wall, portions of which, rising above Paradox Canyon, are so steep that, absent the paving, no wheeled vehicle can climb it.

The next mountain, however, is too steep even for a patrol road. The previous contractor’s employees dubbed the peak “Widow Maker,” and the zigzag scars of switchbacks and ledges by which they gained access to the path of the wall make it easy to understand why.

Fisher is the largest player in the wall-building business. Based in North Dakota, it was the contractor for “We Build the Wall,” a crowd-funded enterprise that got its promoters, including Steve Bannon, a longtime Trump ally, convicted for fraud. “We Build the Wall” funded Fisher to build 3.5 miles of wall on private land beside the Rio Grande near Mission, Texas. The Department of Justice and the International Boundary Waters Commission subsequently sued Fisher for shoddy work and violation of the boundary treaty with Mexico. The suit has since been settled, with Fisher having agreed to make immediate repairs and carry out future repairs subject to the forfeit of a $3-million bond.

The Paradox Canyon rancher whom I came to visit is philosophical about the wall. The assault on his land began at the end of Trump I and, after a Biden-era pause, has resumed at full strength. The “shock and awe” accompanying Trump’s resumption of office, he says, left no room for negotiating a more sensible path forward. He believes that the symbolism of the wall is its real power, as it channels the fears of the MAGA faithful. The wall, he says, stands for more than shutting out migrants and narcos. It stands for shutting out other complex things, possibly complexity itself. It represents Trump’s promise to his base that their worldview will be fulfilled.

Making War at Home and Abroad

My rancher friend feels that his present task is to weather the storm of wall-building and await a time when wiser heads prevail, when the rush to spend and build might yield to thoughtful redesign, when gaps for wildlife might be installed and properly monitored, and when the wall’s proponents and its enemies might find a “third path.”

Meanwhile, the excavators, scrapers, bulldozers, and haulers carry on. From concertina wire to counter-functional buoys, from mountain blasting to free-wheeling billion-dollar contracts, the mindset behind the wall is the same as that which spawned the Iran war. Both are exercises in unchecked power. Both were conceived with disdain for the complexities of the real world. Both serve rhetorical as much as tangible purposes.

The war with Iran has confounded Trump’s expectation of a quick victory. Thousands of gravestones will be its monument. The Border Wall, in its own slow way, will provide another sort of monument. It won’t be the graves of those who died crossing it or flanking it by sea, for they will rarely be marked at all. And it won’t be the local extinctions of plants or animals, for they will simply vanish. It will instead be a tottering, linear, soulless version of Stonehenge — think of it as America’s Steelhenge — built on sand and made of haste, fear, and avarice.

It will memorialize Trump’s success in making America less and less great.

This piece first appeared on TomDispatch.

The Driest March in 131 Years



 May 4, 2026

Image by Wesley Tingey.

This article is based upon an analysis of a climate change black swan event currently spreading across America.

As of April 28th, the U.S. Drought Monitor confirmed much of the country in various stages of drought with some regions in serious condition. The Plains States and entire Southeast are trapped in various stages of unending drought. The West is another story altogether, experiencing lost snowpack like never before in history.

But the most haunting number is the Palmer Drought Severity Index PDSI for March. Based on NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) data, March 2026 recorded an exceptionally low Palmer Drought Severity Index PDSI of -7.84 for the contiguous U.S. This is the most severe March reading since 1895 or 131 years ago.

Mainstream news outlets claim it’s “a normal dry season,” but the intensity and reach more closely resemble a sinister black swan event with earmarks of what could become an irreversible systemic collapse.

The atmosphere is locked in a very high percentile heat shock, plummeting Snow Water Equivalents (SWE) to dangerous lows accompanied by a stiff La Niña feedback loop. Unlike the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, this ‘Double Drought’ is simultaneously draining the fossilized Ogallala Aquifer and pushing the Colorado River Basin past its absolute physical tipping point.

The national power grid and massive AI data centers, mega cities, and 40 million people could be facing an inescapable, catastrophic breaking point. After all, the entire West Coast is totally dependent upon water. It’s everything; it’s the lifeblood of existence.

Snowpack’s “Water Bank” Turning Bankrupt

The snowpack (water bank) is the only thing that keeps that vast infrastructure operational, but it has never been so sparse at this crucial stage. The trusty water bank may be going bankrupt.

The unbelievable heat wave in March triggered a broken-down chain reaction. In the Colorado River Basin, the Rio Grande, and the Sierra Nevada the snow did not melt; it evaporated and forcibly flowed downstream. Drought.gov confirmed the collapse in early April. Snow/Water Equivalent, SWE plummeted. A drought emergency has already been declared in some states in mid-spring, way too early on a normal basis for such a declaration. Alas, this season has experienced not only slight snowfall, but of more significance, the water supply calendar for nearly one-half of America has been nearly destroyed. Tons of water have been “forced down” by inordinate heat in March, overwhelming reservoirs down below that were forced to release massive amounts of precious water, or burst from overflow, that otherwise would have been available during the upcoming hotter summer months. Indeed, it’s a black swan event of unprecedented proportions.

Statement By U.S, Forest Service (April 2026)

“It is unlikely that snowpacks will rebound at this point in the season, leaving scant snow reserves to supply water through the summer months.” (USDA Forest Service d/d April 3rd, 2026)

Our modern society of billion-dollar mega cities, and massive food supply chains has been established on a 20th century calendar. A calendar that dictated snow would hold water and spring would arrive on schedule. In 2026 that calendar will cease to exist. If the West has lost its only natural water-holding source for the summer, what will happen when real fire arrives?

The West is losing Snow; the East is Losing Moisture.

Meanwhile, America’s Southeast is heavily locked in extreme drought. Florida is in the worst drought since the turn of the millennium. More than 1,500 wildfires have ripped thru the state of Florida over only the first four months of 2026. Florida peatlands (normally moist) are drying up and smoldering from beneath the surface. In turn, this incinerates the reef system.

The 2026 drought is referred to as a ‘Compound Drought” the result of convergence of three destructive forces. Scientists warned about this for years now; (1) climate change – the planet’s baseline temperature has warmed which turns the atmosphere into a “giant dehumidifier,” draining water from the soil as well as vegetation faster than ever before (2) a long La Nina cycle that deflects the jet stream blocking rainstorms from the South and Great Plains (3) the March 2026 “heat shock” across the country depleting snow reserves and soaking up moisture before the advent of spring.

The West Sucked Dry

The “sponginess of the atmosphere” or how much moisture hot, dry air sucks up from the land is at an eye-popping 77% above normal. This is ‘vapor pressure deficit,” and it’s off the charts. According to UCLA hydroclimatologist Park Williams, this sensitive reading is 25% above the all-time previous record for January thru March in the West. Professor Williams claims that amount of moisture sucking from the ground was previously not considered possible, until now. (Source: Record U.S. Drought Sparks Fears About Wildfires, Water Supply and Food Prices, CBS News, April 18, 2026)

Drought usually peaks in summer, not spring, and that’s what worries scientists this year. America is starting to collapse from its ground up as its fragile topsoil sustains 330 million people.

Winter wheat, a crop planted in the fall to be harvested in the summer, is dying of thirst. The percentage of crops achieving good to excellent grades has plummeted, a dramatic drop compared to the same period last year. As of late April 2026, approximately 68% to 70% of the U.S. winter wheat crop is located in areas experiencing drought According to USDA data, as of late April 2026, 98% of the U.S. cotton crop is located within areas experiencing drought. Such extreme statistics highlights an ongoing threat of high abandonment rates

“Farmers across the Great Plains are confronting an intense drought that threatens winter wheat harvests and is pushing cattle producers toward costly feed purchases…The dryness is expected to persist through spring after weeks of scant rainfall and a late-winter heat spell that fueled massive pasture fires across the nation’s breadbasket. Drought now covers nearly 90% of Nebraska and Oklahoma, with more than half of Nebraska in “extreme” drought.” (US Wheat Crops Wither, Herds Thin as Spring Drought Deepens, The Spokesman Review, est 1883, April 27, 2026)

Ogallala Aquifer Threat

Beneath the arid soil of eight states stretching from South Dakota to the tip of Texas lies Ogallala Aquifer. North America’s largest aquifer. It’s the continent’s backup battery, an invisible ocean containing fossilized water accumulated since the Ice Age. The natural recirculation rate is a few inches per year, but tens of thousands of industrial scale pumps drain hundreds of feet of water, not inches. In 2026, with 80% of Oklahoma and 75-85% of Texas succumbing to surface drought, farmers are pumping full-out.

Drill Results: USGS reports in West Texas confirm that many bore holes into the famous aquifer have hit ‘rock bottom.’

According to The Topeka Capital-Journal d/d Feb. 17, 2026, “Southwest Kansas farmers face significant water cuts to save the Ogallala Aquifer.” But. “save it” for what… to puppy-it-along with decreasing production of both water and crops?

Risky Living: Phoenix- five million inhabitants live in the middle of a desert. For the first time in RE history, a state is regulating RE development based upon water. Contractors are being forced to prove their projects have a guaranteed water supply. Many projects have been rejected.

Meanwhile, a series of AI data centers are being constructed, consuming millions of gallons of water to cool servers. Some centers adopt circular water systems to reduce direct use. However, according to a Ceres study, while direct cooling is a significant factor, “indirect water” required for energy generation accounts for up to 75% of total consumption, a crucial, often overlooked factor found in the Ceres analysis.

According to ABC15 Arizona; “More than 125 data centers already operate in Maricopa County, with many more seeking to establish operations in Arizona. The expansion has created excitement among entrepreneurs while raising concerns from city leaders about costs and infrastructure.” Oh, really!

Yesterday’s Climate Vanishes

The decisions made in the 20th century were based upon assumptions that tomorrow’s climate will be exactly the same as yesterday’s. But 2026 is the year that assumption may officially crumble.

Who said climate change is a hoax?

Robert Hunziker lives in Los Angeles and can be reached at rlhunziker@gmail.com.