of american voices, live from texas, begins now. today, a push for accountability in this tight-knit community. until tuesday, uvalde was a quiet town where everybody knows your name, now the scene of america s latest mass shooting. around town, you will see uvalde strong signs hanging outside businesses and homes. families working to make sense of what happened, coming together to draw messages of hope on sidewalks with chalk on ministry. it is clear that the 21 lives lost here will never be forgotten. outside i take care, 21 chair sit outside to honor the 19 kids and two teachers taken from this town far too soon. live stolen from senseless violence. the daycares honors, like most uvalde, you many the students and watch them grow up over the years. we are learning more about their lives, their unforgettable personalities behind each face, big plans for the future. rodriguez had big dreams of becoming a marine biologist. she planned to study at texas a&m. her mom said that s
kids and two teachers taken from this town far too soon. live stolen from senseless violence. the daycares honors, like most uvalde, you many the students and watch them grow up over the years. we are learning more about their lives, their unforgettable personalities behind each face, big plans for the future. rodriguez had big dreams of becoming a marine biologist. she planned to study at texas a&m. her mom said that she was carrying and cold driven. her classmate lexi rubio wanted to become a lawyer. her family said that she loved learning about feminism and played volleyball in middle school. as we honor the victims, we are struggling to understand how a gun man was able to get inside or school in the first place, and why the gunman was allowed to stay inside for as long as he did. it is a question at the forefront in today s new york times. the editorial board examining the police response, writing, quote, 17 minutes elapsed after the gunmen walk inside before police, bel
what we don t owe them is some nonsense about replacing a pair of glasses. there is a community health clinic here in uvalde that serves 11,000 latinos that do not have health insurance. they have a behavioral health component and not enough money to be able to have full-time therapists. they have their piss doing telemedicine on. we need to have four or five therapists. greg abbott needs to give that community health clinic $2 million right now. i asked for that is today. he has said nothing about that. this is going to be a long term mental health issue, for sure, for survivors and for friends of survivors and family. i talk to little girls s yesterday and a restaurant that were crying to me. they said, we were scared, but then i got brave. they were braver then the folks trying to get in there. these little kids, i am just. shocked and devastated. i am heartbroken by all of this. we owe them much more than what this guy has done. we owe them change. we owe them money to help them
answers, which is why we keep asking about the timeline and what happened there grieving process is just in the beginning, what type of support are they re going to need as they continue the process? when we don t owe them is some nonsense about replacing a pair of glasses. there is a community health clinic here in uvalde that serves 11,000 latinos that do not have health insurance. they have a behavioral health component and not enough money to be able to have full-time therapists. they have their pace that we re doing telemedicine on. we need to have four or five therapist. greg abbott needs to give that community health clinic $2 million right now. i asked for that is today. he has said nothing about that. this is going to be a long term mental health issue, for sure, for survivors and for friends of survivors and family. i talk to little girls s today in a restaurant that were crying to me. they said, we were scared, but then i got brave. they were braver then the folks