had some goals from early age. when i first got a scholarship to boston university they were the powerhouse in the country in the mid 90s. that first game was the best game of my life. and by the time it was over it turned into the worst. from the time they dropped the puck until they blew the whistle it was 11 seconds. we have a player down in the corner. oh, it s travis roy. my body it wasn t responding. i said can you find my dad? knelt down i said, dad, i m in big trouble. exploded my fourth and fifth cervical vertebrae. the rehab and recovery was tedious, it was slow. i just have a little bit of my right bicep. figure i have to move on. i graduated in 2000, when i was on the rehab floor and saw other families going through this. turned out i had great insurance. there were families that didn t have any. that s when i thought maybe we can raise some money to help cover some of these expenses for
responded to it because that s what the question was about, was about secretary clinton s debate. i can just hang on. i said she had been criticized for it but wasn t it better to admit it and confront it directly and you went on to pivot about politics. i went on to pivot to talk about why she was criticize body it. go ahead, angela. so in the hopes of making this more humane, paris, to your point, we all have implicit bias. i often use an example when a police officer is behind me in a car, no lights on, just behind me. my heart starts pounding and that implicit bias on my part they think i might get pulled over and it may go left. why? because there are video, people s experiences they grew up with where there was rodney king, where fear was taught because we don t have positive ent
response about how people responded to it because that s what the question was about, was about secretary clinton s debate. i can just hang on. i said she had been criticized for it but wasn t it better to admit it and confront it directly and you went on to pivot about politics. i went on to pivot to talk about why she was criticize body it. go ahead, angela. so in the hopes of making this more humane, paris, to your point, we all have implicit bias. i often use an example when a police officer is behind me in a car, no lights on, just behind me. my heart starts pounding and that is implicit bias on my part they think i might get pulled over and it may go left. why? because there are video, people s experiences they grew up with where there was rodney king, where fear was taught because we don t have positive interactions with police
our affiliate spoke with him about finding the 19-year-old in his backyard. i know people say there was blood on the boat and he saw blood and went in. not true? not true. the word is you saw the boat you pulled back the wrapping you saw a body it moved and you called 911. oh no no no. no? so he went to the garage and grabbed a stepladder. i got, i think, three steps up the ladder. i rolled it up and can see through now the shrink wrap. i didn t expect to see anything. i look in the boat over here on the floor, and i see blood. a lot of blood? good amount of blood. my eyes went to the other side of the engine box. the engine box is in the middle. there was a body. and at that moment what did you do? what were you thinking at that moment? oh my god.
sure they are not terrorist. and it is so what, five years, anybody can slip through the cracks. tsa have allowed knifes and guns into the airports and through the screeners, i am little concern body it. stove, it is it a crack in the security? no, not if they do it right and i hope they use better judgment here than when they allow axes and machetes on the airplanes. they backed off on that. they have a pretsa program and when it works it is magnificent. the co thing 85 bucks i am like rich, i am glad to pay the government money and get something in return. the foes go nowhere but up what about the cost? it should be free. it would require less government resources than when they put you through the rigamarole.