distin instincts, right? i do what i know is right. i do what my family has taught me. my dad has been there, a great role model my whole life, holding me accountable and leading by example. and i do what s right, i know what s right, i ve lived that way and i just do what i think is right. but there was something else, mike, and that was, you know, with your passion for the red sox, about a baseball player, and when he s up at bat, he swung that bat 10,000 times. and he knows, he doesn t have to think about it. and i asked dakota, what were you thinking in the battle. and he said, just my aim point. just aim point. so he was using a 50 caliber machine gun, a 240 machine gun, his grenade launcher, a rifle, and finally he killed a man with a rock. and all the time he was looking at the sight picture, because he had fired 10,000 rounds before he had got into the fight. it s a combination of instinct and training and your
are told from multiple sources. but they are watching for it. so if there is a launch, u.s. satellites would very quickly, within seconds, pick up that heat signature, the infrared signs of a launch. they would then begin to be able to quickly calculate a missile s trajectory, its flight path. where it s headed and its aim point. the target it is aimed at. what we know is that the u.s. procedure is military agencies, intelligence agencies, will all be in instant communication as this trajectory and target would be plotted. they would be able to calculate whether that missile, in fact, is headed for guam. and that means within minutes. and, really, minutes. that s all they have. they have to decide if they want to make the effort to shoot the missile down, if it, in fact, is headed for guam, american territory. one of the interesting wrinkles here is, the north koreans