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Bipartisan Fight Against Trump's Border Wall in Big Bend

Bipartisan Fight Against Trump's Border Wall in Big Bend
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Outdoor company Yeti's co-founder Ryan Seiders, part-owner of Moody Bennett Ranch, allowed Barnard Construction to use the land for equipment and materials.

"Yeti Holdings does not have any involvement or ownership in Moody Bennett Ranch," a Yeti spokesperson said.

This cooperation complicates the grassroots efforts.

"The only reason there's any work getting done is those people, and they stand to make a lot of money," says Yolanda Alvarado, landowner coordinator for NBBW.

Alvarado explains landowners' rights and legal options.

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If more capitulate, she has much to lose: the wall would cut her family's ranch in two, leaving their well and ancestral cemetery inaccessible.

"We're fighting like hell," says David Keller, NBBW board member.

Despite federal resources, the opposition remains firm.

"A lot of people say, 'This is the federal government and they'll do what they want,' and I'm like, 'That's not how this works.'

We have a brilliant team. There's not going to be a wall," Alvarado says.

Rooted to the Border Wilderness

Deep ancestral ties motivate local residents. "I have family from Presidio that goes way back.

As a little girl we'd travel here and I dreamed of living here," says resident Anna Claire Beasley.

"I'm not going to roll over."

The feeling of isolation reinforces their drive. "We know that we only have each other.

There's no one we can call," Beasley says.

Most Americans don't care much about far-west Texas, so locals lead the fight. At the highest levels, the Texas GOP has used noncommittal language.

"No idea what the border actually is," Walker says.

"The American understanding is built off worst-case scenarios and manufactured fear rhetoric; it completely disregards that there are American lives and thriving communities rooted to the border."

The fight remains in residents' hands. Keller lost his job, both parents, and a serious relationship.

Big Bend is all he has left.

"I've pinned my entire life on this place," Keller says. "So what does it mean to lose it?

Some might say, 'Well, you're not losing it. They're just building a wall through it.'

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But to me, it's a total loss. I don't know if I could stay."

J
Editors Team
Author: jojo
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