SureFire

You Never Know Where They’ll Show Up

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This shot came from one if our readers in a “certain law enforcement agency specializing in the importing and deporting business.”

Thanks for standing watch on the wall!

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20 Responses to “You Never Know Where They’ll Show Up”

  1. Shawn says:

    What kind of rig is that?

  2. Max says:

    “I do a lot of . . . exporting.”

  3. Stefan S says:

    Right! Go to any Home Depot and see how good BP is!

    • ST Doc says:

      Don’t be a d-bag. You should try to patrol a huge number of miles and then you can criticize.

      • Jon Meyer says:

        Not to mention there is only like 30 thousand BP agents and less than that assigned to both the north and south borders that stretch thousands of miles each. Include the limited man power with the probably tens of thousands maybe hundreds of thousands trying to cross those borders and you can’t come close to stopping them all.

        • Al V says:

          “probably tens of thousands maybe hundreds of thousands trying to cross those borders”
          I have a hard time believing this figure coming from the north, maybe during the winter then I can understand!
          Call a spade a spade.

          • Jon Meyer says:

            I was referring to both north and south but obviously more south.

            To the gentleman that said the numbers aren’t that great; it is probably not that great but close yearly. That is including both who do get across and who fail. Not to mention the ones we don’t know about. Much larger than the men and women patrolling the borders we know that much for sure. They work hard and deserve praise just like the armed forces, law enforcement, firefighters and any occupation that dedicates their life to service of this fine country (worthless politicians and bureaucrats aside).

    • bob says:

      CBP Agents have one the most thankless jobs in US Government. If you’re pissed off about the status of illegals in America, contact your Reps instead of whining on a website. Our immigration/deportation/enforcement policies have more to do with it than anything else. To the Agent that posted the photo, thanks for your service, and stay safe!

    • Will says:

      Dont blame the Agents. DC policies are what dictate non-enforcement. Pretty much government wide.

  4. SSD says:

    Note from the “Internet tough guy that runs this site”

    I don’t like Internet doucehbags.

  5. Wade says:

    Nice rig. Good guys. Too bad they work for such assoholes (DC).

  6. Todd says:

    Where do I go to get one of these Patches?

  7. This guy says:

    Where can I get one of the Sons of Liberty Patches that he has. It looks to be PVC. The only one I can find is on eBay and looks suspect.

  8. Beejay says:

    My neighbors, my guardians. I live down here on the Mex border, and I really appreciate the hard work done by the folks at the BP stations here. They are all way younger than me, and I’m not envious of their duties one bit. I did my time in uniform, and for many of these officers it’s their second set after serving. Bravo zulu, people, you’ve earned it.

    It was 106 here today, and some of them have been out all day in this. In some ways this is not unlike what I’ve heard Afghanistan is like, although no one is carrying AK’s, and there are no IED’s. There is some danger, yes, but Mother Nature is more likely to kill you this time of year than any other cause.

    By the way, the numbers of people trying to get across is not that great, probably in the hundreds only each day. Our stagnant economy has done more to discourage border jumping than anything else.

    The drugs are always waiting though. Hundreds of people on both sides are working to keep bringing them in without interruption, and the overlords are armed. That is the major problem here, not people. I have no big ideas about how to change the equation here, but no should blame the agents for the malaise in DC.