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Why Cain’s Electrified Fence Is Not So Shocking

Created: 28 October, 2011
Updated: 13 September, 2023
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4 min read

   An electrified fence. On the border. Designed to kill people. Along with “real guns with real bullets.”

   This is the immigration “plan” recently proposed by Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain.

   And he’s one of his party’s frontrunners.

   There’s no question that immigration is a serious issue that needs to be addressed. No one wants to see people entering this country illegally — that’s why we need bipartisan, comprehensive immigration reform in this country. We need leaders who aren’t afraid to take up this problem and acknowledge the realities of how we live. For too long, Washington has failed in its responsibilities and not lifted a finger to do anything about this issue.

   But Mr. Cain doesn’t support bipartisan immigration reform. Neither do any of the other Republican presidential candidates. They all oppose a path to citizenship. They all oppose a federal DREAM Act. They all support Arizona’s draconian law that promotes racial profiling.

   Instead, Mr. Cain supports electrified fences, guns and bullets. His proposal is not just offensive to the Hispanic community but unbecoming of someone seeking high office, and it flies in the face of everything this great country stands for.

   After repeating his comments several times, Mr. Cain said he was merely joking. But there’s nothing funny about the violent imagery he’s espoused. His comments are reprehensible and should be condemned.

   Instead, what we got from the other Republican candidates was silence. They spent the most recent debate pandering to the worst elements of the Tea Party and arguing over who was the most right-wing, but not one critical word was said about Mr. Cain’s remarks.

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   Disappointing? Yes. Surprising? Sadly, no.

   The Republicans running for president, and many running for other office (like Senate candidate Heather Wilson in New Mexico) have embraced a Tea Party agenda that will hurt many average Americans — but will be particularly devastating to Hispanic Americans.

   While Mr. Cain may try to laugh off his offensive comments about an electrified fence as a joke, there are very serious consequences to the Tea Party agenda shared by Cain, Romney, Rick Perry, Heather Wilson, and Republican candidates across the country.

   Thirty-one percent of New Mexico Hispanics under the age of 17 live below the poverty line. Yet the Republican candidates continue to coddle Wall Street, millionaires and large corporations while proposing to slash Medicaid funding, causing 36 million people to lose their coverage. And they would cut food stamp benefits for a family of four by nearly $1,800 a year. As someone who grew up in public housing while living on food stamps, that’s no laughing matter.

   Nearly half of New Mexico’s Hispanic students don’t graduate from high school. Many of them come from rural communities that are among the most economically distressed in the country. Yet the Republican candidates have a plan that would cut federal spending for education and training by 25 percent — it would cut 320,000 children from Head Start and cut assistance for families trying to send their children to college. As the first from my town to graduate from law school, the husband of a public school teacher, and father of children in New Mexico public schools, that’s not funny.

   There are over 60,000 Hispanic senior citizens in New Mexico. Yet the Republican candidates have proposed privatizing Social Security, putting it at the mercy of a volatile stock market. And they support eliminating Medicare as we know it, increasing costs for seniors by $6,400. As someone who was raised by a single mother that now relies on Medicare, there is nothing funny about that.

   For too long, the wealthy and powerful have benefited from Washington policies that continue to help them at the expense of everyone else. Rather than focus on policies that will grow our economy, create jobs, hold both Washington and Wall Street accountable, and lift everyone up by bringing people together, Republicans and the Tea Party have decided that it is in their political interest to continue dividing us by pitting us against one another.

   Mr. Cain’s remarks take that to a whole new level. That, I’m sorry to say, is no joke.

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   And, sadly, given the harmful plans they have for the country, his “joke” about an electrified fence is not that shocking all.

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