Top. Right. Corner.
I only did what was expected.
Given the turn to the absurd we've seen from the thread originator here, there's no need to really attempt to explain any more nuanced positions.
My feelings on eminent domain in general are mixed. It's more okay when it's somebody else than it is when it's me, but it's unfortunately a necessity of life. I felt bad for the people whose houses moved closer to the road when they turned the two-lane into a four-lane several years ago, but I definitely appreciate the fact that I no longer have to sit in long lines of traffic (or take circuitous alternate routes) just to get to my house.
I'm sorry for the people who have land that abuts the border, but their rights to that property end where national security begins. They will be compensated, even if it's not as much as the THINK they should get for a patch of scruffy desert populated by cacti, sand fleas, scorpions and coyotes (both human and canine).
I think maybe, perhaps, they should have a choice to pay for and maintain -- to standards -- the wall themselves if it's on their land, but that would likely require too much to keep up with.
Long and short? While it bothers me that this kind of stuff is necessary, the fact remains that it is. Hate it for them, but "strong arming" is a little bullshitty. Eminent domain claims happen every single day all over the place. If you want to argue the merits of eminent domain as a practice in general, that's a different discussion. It happens. It has happened. It will happen again.
Shining a bright light on this one particular instance is just more "Trump BAAAAAD" bleating from the lefty sheep.
You prefer that answer?