@ 1wbq:
There is nothing in your response that provides a rebuttal to the thesis that the tariffs are not good for American businesses or American workers.
How and why the tariffs are bad, and how they aren't hurting the people/institutions they're directed toward has been throughly explained elsewhere on this thread.
Nobody who is saying the tariffs are a good thing can explain how or why they are good thing. They won't lead to higher wages. They won't lead to more jobs. UP and their "Unified Plan 2020" are good examples. Not only did UP executives use the money they received from the tax cut to buy back stocks (and thus pad their own compensation packages), but when the tariffs and other poorly informed trade policies began costing them money, they cut jobs and scaled back investments.
Immigration, poverty, and child labor are tangential to original post. The jobs that immigrants are doing fall into two categories: jobs that Americans won't do (picking fruit, cleaning toilets, removing asbestos, etc.), and jobs that there aren't enough Americans to do (medical doctors, computer engineers, etc.). Do you want to pay $25 for a bag of onions? How about $2,000 for a smartphone? $3,500 for a basic laptop computer?
Nobody benefits from trade protectionism except for the people doing the protecting.