Another border rancher is speaking publicly about the need for a wall between the United States and Mexico.

Speaking to MSNBC, seventh-generation land owner Roberto Escobar says the illegal activity coming in from Mexico has hit his family directly.

“I lost my only son to the drug trafficking business, I have a daughter that got hooked on drugs,” the man, whose family has owned the same land for 200 years, says.

The rancher regularly sees Border Patrol agents in the river, and human traffickers and drug smugglers are never far away.

“We might not stop everything that comes across with that wall,” he tells MSNBC, “but if we can stop part of it, a good portion of it, let’s do it.”

Arizona ranchers John Ladd and Fred Davis invited House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi to see the southern border from their property, but she never responded.

But they responded this morning to Pelosi’s recent claim that the border wall is “immoral, expensive, unwise.”

Appearing on Fox & Friends in April, Ladd said border crossings by illegal aliens have decreased 90% to 95% since Donald Trump took office.

Perhaps more shockingly, Ladd has determined through Border Patrol data that some 500,000 illegal aliens have crossed his property in the 30 years he’s owned it.

Davis disputed Pelosi’s notion that a wall would divide border towns.

“All the communities that I know about, all the cities along the border, already have high fences,” he told co-host Steve Doocy, disputing Pelosi’s argument.

“Where the wall is necessary is in a lot of the outlying areas that still only have a four-wire barbed-wire fence between Mexico and us.”

Davis said the wall, which he said is one tool, is necessary to stop drug cartels and other criminals from entering the U.S.

“You’ve got to put boots on the ground to make it effective, and that’s been part of the problem on what places they have a wall now,” he said.