At such a young and vulnerable age, children tend to be the most impressionable and can be easily influenced by the behavior around them; even the smallest things can affect their futures. Being forcibly recruited into a world where violence is the only answer is dangerous for anyone, especially if they are children. The psychosocial trauma, due to the intense environment is immense. Before they can even graduate high school, kids are being trained to fight in a battle that they did not choose to be in. Even after they escape the war and enter a rehabilitation center, those children are still scarred from the horrors they witnessed on a daily basis. They still have to deal with the family and childhood they lost, and the scars they …show more content…
Countries that turn away immigrants are generally hurting their own economy (¨We Should. . . Take in Refugees¨). Before they begin to work, immigrants are consumers, they usually receive money from various sources such as charities and their families to obtain necessities and pay rent. The economy is able to flourish even more for a longer time because refugees are more likely to work than native-born people. They endure tremendous adversity and struggle to escape their country, to work in other areas and provide for their families. Instead of praise for their hard work, they are faced with copious amounts of hate, backlash, and torture. Around twenty-million refugees are unlikely to pose a threat to national security, they are trying to flee from terror, not incite it. This goes against what people wrongfully assume about them and their intentions (¨We Should. . . Take in Refugees¨). Many believe that immigrants are terrorists, rapists, thieves or coming to steal their jobs, but the amount of people wanting to start new lives and get away from violence and horror are overwhelmingly more. Fake news continues to fill the minds of many, trying to force them into a way of thinking that makes them hate outsiders when really, the ones they should hate, are