It's a lot better than your current position that the overwhelming majority of illegal immigrants are making sub minimum wage because your gut tells you so. Do you have any data that supports your claim?I'm sure people getting paid under the table are very eager to answer surveys. Polls and surveys are useless, especially anonymous ones.
1. They plainly aren't in most credible US studies done in the past couple decades. We've discussed this multiple times, and you always nope the fuck out when I point out to you that including the cost of educating American citizens is blatantly wrong.1. All the illegals are a huge net financial drain.
2. There are far more than 10 million illegals. They've been saying 11 million are in the country for decades. That many or more came in during the last 4 years alone. Wherever you're getting your stats are hilariously wrong.
2. I didn't say there were 10 million illegal immigrants in the US, use your brain for once, please.
Again, what's the lifetime cost of 10 million new US citizens? Hint, I did you a favor and picked an easy round number.
Where are these estimates from? Link, please.Hard to say. But some estimates show it to be about 451 billion per year.
If the goal is ending the exploitation of laborers, why would you support guest worker programs then? Those are notoriously prone to abuse. Surely it's not because you're feigning sympathy to make a weak point.I'm not disputing America has done this in the past. That doesn't make it right. That needs to change and we have to pay more for fruits and vegetables. Too fucking bad if you want to pay less for it.
You're confusing basic stats. What I referred to is Engels coefficient (% of consumer spending), not % of income. Korea's is close to 30%, whereas in the US its barely over 10%. The latter is also based on individuals, while the former is based on households (aka individual Koreans spend even more on food). Note that this is always a very regressive metric, as in Korea your lowest quintile has to spend almost 40% of gross income on food.You're just pulling numbers out of your ass. Overall, the average South Korean household spent 14.4% of its monthly budget on food in the first three quarters of 2024.