DFK! wrote:
That's not securing something. That's disincentivizing. Pretty big difference actually.
Let me try to use an imperfect military analogy. Guerillas want to use a town as a staging point. You can either occupy it by force and "secure" it, or you can level the entire town, thereby eliminating anything they want there and "disincentivizing" it.
Securing the border, and thus protecting the national sovereignty of the US, involves physically protecting it, with force if necessary. Disincentivizing people from crossing it through "comprehensive reform" is not securing it, because even if you dramatically reduce the number of illegal crossings, they will still happen. Securing said border involves manpower.
Disincentivizing is a contributor to securing. When you disincentivize an action that compromises security, you can then expend less resources on security. In your town example, you now have more resources to secure everything else with. In the border example, if you remove incentive you can (theoretically) use fewer resources to get the same level of security, or use the same resources and get more security. Either way, you've "secured" by "disincentivizing".
So yes, it is disincentivizing, and it's also securing. The two are not mutually exclusive. Just because "words have meanings" does not mean all words are mutually exclusive or that only one correct word can be used for any given thing.
Not only that but "they [illegal crossings] will still happen" is not a reason that disincentivizing is not securing the border. They will still happen no matter what, because 100% perfection is not practical. By that logic, adding more border patrol agents isn't securing the border either because "it will still happen" until we hit that magical point where they
don't happen at all and then it's "secure". That's a silly definition to use unless we're securing something where absolute perfection is necessary, like a nuclear weapons depot. Rather, the border is secure when the other layered defenses we have, like ICE can deal with whatever does get through without being saturated like they are now, and when illegal immigrants are not a major economic force.