know much about the communications here in the united states. we don't know what she was like when she arrived and what she was like living in saudi arabia. it would be a bit premature to assume she was living one way or the other. what we can jnly say is living in saudi arabia is a very conservative country, there's media reports out there from reuters and others that have been able to speak to relatives of her family saying that her family's extremely conservative, that even relatives that knew the father said over his course of lifetime living in saudi arabia he had even become more conservative, more extreme in his ideology. that's at least one characterization from that family inside saudi arabia. how's that translated over into the western society, much more open, a shock to the system you're living in a much more open society. the question becomes, how did they manage that? was that part of the radicalization process? part of the motivation in this attack? and there's so many questions to this that remain unresolved. one of the point relationally interesting from the fbi in that