DACA for the Wall, Why?

The prospect of ending Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, and deporting an entire class of inhabitants who have never known a home beyond America, is a no-win stance, politically, for Republicans and conservatives, and a no-win proposition for President Trump, except as a tool of leverage on the much greater issue, the wall along the Southern border.

The globalists’ plan, executed overwhelmingly by the Democrats, to render America to a state no greater than any other, depends upon open borders.  Over time open borders mean that the American culture, and the very meaning of America, its heritage and founding, would be lost.  Open borders would eventually result in the American culture becoming homogeneous with various non-American cultures who understand no such heritage and meaning.  When that occurs, federal government policies would tend to follow the transient opinions of the masses whose individual concerns for personal well-being overwhelm any larger concerns for preserving the high ideals that have proven the very source of their well-being.  And once the role of elected government becomes nothing more than satisfying the dominant desires of the masses, artful politicians would learn how to use those desires as carrots, generally pleasing the masses enough to gain election, but never enough to truly satisfy their demands with policy.

Some would say the conditions I describe for the future are no different than those we experience today, that we are already beyond the point of effectively preserving the American ideals in the public mind.  And I would agree to a certain extent.  But throughout American history there has always been a remnant whose strong commitment toward conserving America’s founding purposes has remained a primary concern.  It is that remnant who overcame the globalists’ plans in November of 2016 and elected Donald Trump as president.  If the globalists’ operators, at this point mainly Democrats, are to finally declare victory and render America to a nation no greater than any other, they must overwhelm the political influence of that American remnant whose great exertion put Trump in the White House.  One primary way they do that is to allow the borders to be overrun, in due course populating our country with enough non-American voters to greatly outnumber the remnant I describe.  At that point, the American form of government will have effectively transformed from a constitutional republic, its authority deriving from principles established in 1776, to a democracy whose authority derives from the fleeting opinions of voters motivated to the polls on election days.  And when that occurs, the globalists can declare victory, for good.  That is the plan Trump hopes to stop with the wall.

And so the long view of the DACA/illegal immigration debate is much more than deciding who gets to cross the border into our republic and remain.  The long view is deciding whether America has any chance to remain the republic it is designed to be.

In 2016, the American remnant held together enough to put Donald Trump into the White House.  But while Trump won by a decent electoral vote margin, if the individual vote totals are reliable, we understand that the globalists can now claim over half of America’s voters as their own.  A lesser candidate would have lost in 2016, at which point all indications are that America, as designed, would have been gone for good.  At best, Trump will inhabit the White House for seven more years.  After Trump, the globalists understand they will have their chance once again.


And that is where Trump’s wall comes into play.  Trump has faith in the 21st century ability to build an effective, permanent block against future illegal crossings, resulting chain-migration, and against cartel drug trafficking and smuggling.  Such a wall would set the globalist plan back a century or more. That is Trump’s purpose, and the reason the globalist Democrats will not allow it.  Trump’s wall built today might be the only reason America still exists 100 years from now.  And to permanently confound America’s globalist enemies long after Trump is gone is the greater good our president sees in conceding DACA for the wall.  The political truth is that eliminating DACA and deporting an entire DACA generation, is a no-win issue for Trump or the Republicans anyway.  If DACA is not dealt with politically, rather than on principle, that issue could derail the entire Trump presidency.  The public understands that DACA children, many now adults, have no fault in the circumstances under which they ended in our country.  Trump indicates that unless congress acts, he will be forced send the DACA generation back to its countries of origin.  He understands that the imagery of innocent children such as the Elian Gonzalez being snatched by ICE officials playing out on the national news each evening would soon turn the American public, except for the most passionate hardliners, against both him and the Republicans.  Taking that stance could cost Trump the 2020 election and give the globalists the White House and congress, for good.

Ironically, Trump sees that DACA could be just the right bargaining chip to gain the greater prize of building the wall that could save America from another DACA in the future.  Which is the greater issue, DACA or the wall?  Trump obviously has a well-reasoned opinion.

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