someone who fought so long and hard. there i think the solution is to figure out how not to do it again. turns at your university like jimmy s idea. and matt a matter of weeks, there isn t a yearlong clause to investigate what went wrong in afghanistan, produce a report of their findings. they batted jimmy the undergraduate to not only take the graduate level class, but to be an unofficial co-professor. a retired u.s. ambassador and patterson. jimmy was basically the founder, the branch behind the course. and he was a huge benefit because jamie had, on the ground experience, in afghanistan. my first class was that. jimmy, when it came to yale, i think showed us that education to service is to. his service to the country didn t and when he stopped being a navy seal and serving an active combat. this idea that this is a new phase of this service to the country. and that he was there to learn something so that the world would be better. the class spent months speakin
all spent, and how you managing that? it s hard to tell how much money we have. we have to get the taxi and you have to get tickets both ways and it is really hard. and then ended up here maybe 150,000. alexander wants to find a home for his family. he wants to get a job. he is struggling to find work here in the united states. [speaking non-english] [interpreter] it would be easier if they simplified the job permit process. it is hard. we ve been here with five months with no income. [end of translation] we are just trying to help them and save as many people as we can, and we already brought 15 families here. five more are ready to come to united states. they approved. and more people are waiting over there in the country, in ukraine. it is very hard to choose. it s a choice no one wants to make. but the chosen, in the face of such great loss, are grateful