they are by law not permitted to work. so you have these engineers, these teachers, these professors that are just sitting there. so that s another issue that they wish that we would work with the government to find a way to allow them to work because until it settles in syria, what are they growing to do? andrea: if they don t want to come here and want to stay close and we demand to push them here, that chance for assimilation even goes down further. harris: i think it is a lot to assume someone who lives in a place so beautiful in pal maya in syria, wouldn t want to stay home and have a connection with their own history. these are beautiful people. whoever thought they would want to be in the position they re in. you look at some of the ideas out there, one of them that pops is a way to create demilitarize add zone, a safe zone, if you will for these syrian refugees, when things are worked out and which he go and bomb the mess out of the savages of isis and we can change the environ
once they arrive in europe. the wall street journal is reporting an increasing number of refugees are going to services at mosques that investigators believe attract extremists. germany is expected to take an up to 1.5 million refugees. in the meantime republican presidential candidate ben carson traveled to jordan on friday to meet with syrian refugees. listen to what he says he learned. we re hearing a lot, we re hearing they all want to come here to the united states and that s not what they want. they want to go back home but said the united states and other nations could be much more supportive of the herculean efforts manifested by the jordanians and taking in people at, a lot of to themselves. they can not continue that without help from the international community. andrea: where is that international community? rachel, you were just in amman, jordan as well, you were meeting with refugees.