September 27, 2007
Security (Oh no!)
Congress gets it wrong, again. There's a puffy piece on ABC News saying something like, "Oh Noz!11!! Teh Canadia!11!!"
From the article: "The independent Government Accountability Office told Congress Thursday it sent investigators to test security along the border was able to easily simulate the cross-border movement of radioactive materials and other contraband with no border patrol agents anywhere in sight."
I decided to run some numbers. The Canadian border is 5,500 miles long according to the article. Let's suppose that we want to have a border patrol agent "somewhere in sight" everywhere along the border. Average visibility is probably on the order of 500 feet average for the entire border (moreso in the center of the US, much much much less so in the rockier parts of, well, the Rockies, Maine, etc). 5,500 miles is 29,040,000 feet. This is 58,080 guards needed at any given time. Assuming guards work 8-hour shifts, 174,240 guards would be needed to secure the border.
Assume a $75,000US total cost to the government for the guards each year (after salary, health insurance, etc, and this is very very much on the low end) and it would only cost $13.1 billion dollars to secure the border from drunken hockey players stumbling across with plutonium. Note that unless a geiger counter is given to each guard, the hockey player could just as well hide his/her weapons-grade plutonium in solution inside of an unopened beer bottle.
Honestly, if someone wants to cross the border, they're going to find a way. Seems like an awful lot of money for not a lot of return...







by reid
on October 01, 2007
by reid
on July 17, 2005