Well, I think much more was spent in the rush to hit a target in an unreasonably short period of time. I think it should have been done over a more controlled and regulated period.
If we take another 20,000, I think that's wonderful as long as, again, they're properly selected, processed, and screened, but the reality is that most of the refugees in the Middle East today want eventually to go home. For the 85,000 or 100,000 in the Zaatari camp and the other camps in Jordan and those in the economies in the region, the reality is that they're not going to be accepted by countries of the developed world. They will eventually have to go home, and one hopes to a peaceful—