The border land was initially closed in October 2006 "due to human
safety concerns," the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said Wednesday
in response to news reports on the closure
Now, about 3,500 acres of southern Arizona along the Mexican border
is closed to U.S. citizens due to increased violence in the region.

The closed off area stretches 80 miles along the border and includes
part of the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge. It was closed in
October 2006 "due to human safety concerns," the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service said Wednesday in response to news reports on the
closure.
Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu told Fox News that violence against
law enforcement officers and U.S. citizens has increased in the past
four months, further underscoring the need to keep the 80 miles of
border land off-limits to Americans.
The refuge had been adversely affected by the increase in drug
smugglers, illegal activity and surveillance, which made it
dangerous for Americans to visit.
"The situation in this zone has reached a point where continued
public use of the area is not prudent," said refuge manager Mitch
Ellis.
“It’s literally out of control,” said Babeu. “We stood with Senator
McCain and literally demanded support for 3,000 soldiers to be
deployed to Arizona to get this under control and finally secure our
border with Mexico. “
U.S. Fish and Wildlife officials have warned visitors in Arizona to
beware of heavily armed drug smugglers and human traffickers.

“We need support from the federal government. It’s their job to
secure the border and they haven’t done it,” said Babeu. “In fact,
President Obama suspended the construction of the fence and it’s
just simply outrageous.”
Signs have been posted warning Americans not to cross into the
closed off territory south of Interstate 8. Babeu said the signs are
not enough – he said Arizona needs more resources to help scale back
the violence caused by the drug cartels.
“We need action. It’s shameful that we, as the most powerful nation
on Earth, … can’t even secure our own border and protect our own
families.”
* * * * *
Has the Fish and Wildlife Department
thought about selling hunting licenses? They could charge a fee for
the license and a fee for each ear tag. Out of state hunters would
probably pay a bit more than Arizona residents. The hunting season
would probably run all year long and would be one more reason for
people to visit Arizona and spend money on the local economy.
Taxidermists would thrive mounting trophies. Hunters should receive
some sort of bounty from the DEA for bringing down a drug-mule, or a
bounty from the FBI for downing a jihadi trying to pass as a latino.
All kind of hunters would be attracted by
the Arizona hunting license, from precision snipers interested in
challenging their long-distance skills, to right-wing yahoo militia
groups eager to mix it up with non-aryans. I predict that within a
few years everyone in America will be mowing their own lawn again.

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