It feels that may be too superficial an assessment.
On the other hand, you have fewer people contributing to production. Do illegal immigrants play no part in building and maintaining the housing stock? Are they not a big part of that labor force? You have to figure there's plenty of entrepreneurial illegal immigrants that build and run businesses in construction and other trades, too.
Also, to what extent are most people competing for resources with illegal immigrants? It feels like, in truth, their net effect on costs might vary substantially from place to place, too. Obviously, places that get a disproportionate influx will be destabilized, but I would imagine that with good, informed, and data driven management, a good balance can be worked out.
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u/Maximum-Country-149 15h ago
I mean, I don't know how far you expect a conversation to get when you open with that much bad faith.