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Campaign rhetoric around US-Mexico border is extreme. Living there is a lot more nuanced

Border residents from San Ysidro to Jacumba Hot Springs vary on their opinions about immigration, though many view Tijuana River smell and wait times as more serious problems

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Pete Cerep, 37, looks at documents he found at the U.S.-Mexico border wall as a Border Patrol vehicle drives nearby on Tuesday in Jacumba Hot Springs. Cerep has lived in the area just under two years and said he didn’t know the area was used by migrants to enter into the United States until moving there. (Ana Ramirez/The San Diego Union-Tribune/TNS)
Pete Cerep, 37, looks at documents he found at the U.S.-Mexico border wall as a Border Patrol vehicle drives nearby on Tuesday in Jacumba Hot Springs. Cerep has lived in the area just under two years and said he didn’t know the area was used by migrants to enter into the United States until moving there. (Ana Ramirez/The San Diego Union-Tribune/TNS)

Border residents from San Ysidro to Jacumba Hot Springs vary on their opinions about immigration, though many view Tijuana River smell and wait times as more serious problems

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