andrew arthur is the resident fellow on law and policy for the center for immigration studies, make youing on. who does benefit from this? >> the people who benefit from this are big business, wealthy people benefit from open f borders, essentially limitless immigration, because for them everything comes cheaper. if food is cheaper, you go to the grocery store rather than paying $0.39 for a head of lettuce, you pay $0.35, you can get your lawn cut cheaper, but the people who suffer the most are the people who are at the margins of society, the people who we usually hear that these folks care about. d disadvantaged americans, inner-city youth, members of minority groups and immigrantsou who haven't adjusted to life in the united states yet. those are people in direct competition, those are people who enter in the united states illegally are people who don't have high levels of education, don't have a lot of work skills. there's nothing wrong with that, my father never went to college and worked in a steel mill. when you bring in a huge mass of uneducated, unskilled individuals to directl