Julián Aguilar:

Well the people that supported that that's what they say and I think a lot of folks that aren't from Texas or even are from the border in Texas and they don't realize it at least in Texas we have the 1254 miles of the border. So for example in El Paso there has been fencing here for years. There's been the fencing that was constructed after the 2006 Secure Fence Act and that is just north of the out of the banks of the Rio Grande. So it's pretty parallel to the way the river runs and it's on federal land. But if you go down a river in Brownsville in the county for example a lot of this wall that's currently there is half a mile even a mile north of the river so it cuts right across private lands you know on one side they say hey you know what. I'm sick of these people going to my private land. I'm sick of them traversing through my farmland and you know I like the security that the fence has and some of them for the wall. But I think they are they are outnumbered by a lot of folks that think the wall is a symbol of intolerance and hate as we've heard several times before. You think that some people say it's a waste of time for Border Patrol they want to see more men and women on the ground more technology. And then you also have the environmentalists that say look this is going to disrupt the water flows in this era of wildlife and that I'd say on the whole from what I saw McCallum most people were against it but still again to be fair there were a lot of people that were for the president's agenda.