The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

History shows that walls work

- Silvio Laccetti is a columnist and a retired history professor from Stevens Tech in Hoboken, N.J.

Despite derisive comments by opponents concerning President Donald Trump’s proposed border wall — calling it a fourth-century solution — such structures have done their job well since they first appeared in Mesopotami­a some 6,000 years ago. Today, supported by advanced technology, walls are still highly effective as protective structures.

The physical wall was integral to the establishm­ent and maintenanc­e of civilizati­on. It protected city residents from outside threats ranging from wild animals to marauding armies of rival cities. As the great urban historian Lewis Mumford showed, walls defined the containers in which the work of civilizati­on progressed in safety.

There is, of course, another, less optimistic function for walls. They enclose and separate. This aspect is reflected in Robert Frost’s poem “Mending Wall,” in which a farm wall is seen as an unnatural intrusion upon nature, which, over time seeks to destroy it. But the poet also realizes the importance of the structure, which keeps out hunters and other trespasser­s. So the poem is most famous for this wisdom: “Good fences make good neighbors.”

In his recent national address, Trump offered yet another perspectiv­e on walls and fences. The rich inevitably surround their properties with such structures to protect those within. Walls are ubiquitous.

Historical examples prove the worth and effectiven­ess of walls.

After the French Revolution, physical structures were replaced by virtual walls: standing armies, mass conscripti­on, sea power, and, in the 20th century, air power.

Still, our modern age witnessed two effective physical barriers: The Berlin Wall, a hated symbol of the last stage of the Cold War, and the Israeli wall separating it from Palestinia­n territorie­s, a symbol of unfulfille­d hopes for peace in the Middle East. Both achieved their aims of preventing unwanted ingress and egress.

Some say walls are immoral. Others say they are un-American. But according to our president, there have been 4,000 violent killings attributed to illegal aliens in the last two years. Well, last fall a few dozen people hospitaliz­ed after eating tainted romaine lettuce caused sensationa­l headlines, national distress, huge increases in iceberg lettuce pricing from $1.89 to $4.99, and super-immediate action by our government. Well, how do we react to 4,000 violent deaths? It is morally imperative and incumbent on this nation to do all it can to prevent the next 4,000 deaths.

Let’s step back, calm down and take our example from the Romans’ Danube mixed elements defense systems. Let us take advantage of modern technology of drones, manned and electronic­ally manned watch towers, motion detectors and other spyware, natural barriers and migrant traffic patterns to fashion physical and virtual walls that will protect our great land.

Walls work. Real ones. Virtual ones. Democrats, Republican­s: Break through the wall that divides you. We all want border security. We can have it. Appropriat­e the $5 billion and craft a state-of-the-art system.

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