We talked with a designer of the U.S.-Mexico border-wall seesaws about how they created an art instillation to bring both sides together
When it came time to install the “Teetertotter” at the border last Sunday, Rael says he was extremely nervous: He didn’t know whether the Mexican soldiers stationed at the border or U.S. border patrol officers would take umbrage to the project, or prevent them from installing it. He was pleasantly surprised, however, when the officers and soldiers who asked him about the project didn’t object to it at all.
Since he initially posted his Instagram video of the seesaw, Rael says he’s gotten almost uniformly positive feedback. He’s seen very little negative commentary from border control hawks on the far right, which he says doesn’t surprise him. “There is a fundamental meanness around the concept of a wall and it is very mean to want to keep children from playing,” he says. “I do wonder if that’s why [we’ve gotten very little criticism for the project.
In light of the Supreme Court recently giving Trump the green light to expand border walls, which may cost an, Rael is hopeful his project will draw public attention not just to policy debates, but to the actual lives of those who live and work on the borders. “There are communities there: grandmothers, children, mothers, fathers,” he says.
Singapore Latest News, Singapore Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
California professors install seesaws along U.S.-Mexico border wallCalifornia professors install seesaws along US-Mexico border wall to connect people on both sides of the border.
Read more »
Artists installed seesaws at the border so kids in the US and Mexico could play togetherThese custom-built seesaws have been placed on both sides of a slatted steel border fence that separates the United States and Mexico so kids in each country can play together
Read more »
The wall: Pink seesaws appear at US-Mexico border for kids to play on
Read more »
Pink seesaws appear at border, allowing children in US and Mexico to play togetherA set of bright pink seesaws were installed between the United States and Mexico with children bopping up and down along the divide.
Read more »