Author Topic: Walls and Immigration — Ancient and Modern....By Victor Davis Hanson  (Read 304 times)

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http://www.nationalreview.com/node/436109/print

 Walls and Immigration — Ancient and Modern
The Roman empire faced a challenge similar to what the EU faces.
By Victor Davis Hanson — June 2, 2016

When standing today at Hadrian’s Wall on the border between Scotland and northern England, everything appears indistinguishably affluent and serene on both sides.

It was not nearly as calm some 1,900 years ago. In A.D. 122, the exasperated Roman emperor Hadrian ordered the construction of an 80-mile, 20-foot-high wall to protect Roman civilization in Britain from the Scottish tribes to the north.

We moderns often laugh at walls and fortified boundaries, dismissing them as hopelessly retrograde, ineffective, or unnecessary. Yet they still seem to fulfill their mission on the Israeli border, the 38th parallel in Korea, and the Saudi-Iraqi boundary: separating disparate states.

On the Roman side of Hadrian’s Wall there were codes of law, habeas corpus, aqueducts, and the literature of Cicero, Virgil, and Tacitus — and on the opposite side a violent, less sophisticated tribalism.

Hadrian assumed that there was a paradox about walls innate to the human condition. Scottish tribes hated Roman colonial interlopers and wanted them off the island of Britain. But for some reason the Scots did not welcome the wall that also stopped the Romans from entering Scotland.

continued
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Offline Fishrrman

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Closing remarks of Mr. Hanson:
"Historically, as Hadrian knew, walls are needed only when neighboring societies are opposites — and when large numbers of migrants cross borders without necessarily wishing to become part of what they are fleeing to.
These are harsh and ancient lessons about human nature, but they are largely true and timeless."


Victor (grudgingly) seems to understand and concede why this is necessary: