Except that it's not primarily immigrants that are driving down wages in America, because by and large immigrants and native-born workers occupy different lanes in the labor market, because of course this is America and segregation is our national pastime. For example, Trump put a freeze on those H-1B visas supposedly to protect American workers in high tech sectors from competition, but the reality is that there aren't nearly enough Americans willing and able to fill the huge gaps in the labor force that will create, and so these industries will suffer immensely. Not to mention that all of the hostility that this administration has shown toward immigrants will likely leave an imprint that will persist even if a more friendly regime takes over, meaning that the workers that this country needs and depends on to sustain our standard of living might just stay away and take their talents elsewhere. The poster I was replying to before was puzzled as to why anyone would choose to live in China over the USA, well there are huge numbers of workers in China's tech sector that were educated and trained in American universities, and would have loved to stay here and integrate into American society, but were driven away by racism and xenophobia and now are applying their skills to build companies that will directly harm American interests. And you'll certainly start to see this sort of "reverse brain drain" toward countries all over the world if the hostility and nativism continue, and I have no reason to expect that it won't.