A joint U.S.-Mexico topographical survey found that 787 feet of the 995-feet-long buoy line set up by Texas are in Mexico.

  • You sure as hell do when you put 80% of it outside your borders, outside US borders no less

    This kind of thing could spark a war in different circumstances - imagine the Mexican army goes to dismantle the buoys in their borders, and one of several possible groups from Texas confronts them and it leads to a skirmish

    Mexico would be entirely within their rights - it’s on their property and it’s suspected to be leading to deaths

            • In the sense that we are all international citizens and that any action by anyone near any border is an international “incident”, sure I guess.

              But if you want to be honest and acknowledge that calling something an “international incident” is a pretty loaded term, then I would say absolutely not.

                • There’s a reason the government started calling unidentified flying objects “Unidentified Aerial Phenomena”.

                  Would that definitely be an occurrence between two countries? Yes.

                  Would that be an “international incident”? Maybe.

                • A friend of mine has land up in vermont that borders canada. Directly behind his property line is Canada. If I take a beer can and throw it into Canada, is that an “international incident”?

                  Is the collapsing fence that quite possibly goes into the Canadian border illegal? Is it an “international incident?”

                  • There’s a news report about 80% of Vermont’s trash winding up in Canada, is that not an international incident?

                    I’m just trying to understand your own words, and you’re getting worked up. What do you think the words “international incident” mean?