add in the pressure, it can seem even higher than that. so if somebody starts to have a condition here, it s often called high altitude let me double check it. high altitude pulmonary edema. if you start to get a situation like that, then the problem is you have to get them down very fast, get them on oxygen and get them to sea level. that appears to be what happened. he s now in the er in christchurch. they say he has fluid in the lungs but he s responding well to antibiotics and they think he s going to be okay. of course, he is an american hero. he was on apollo 11 with neal armstrong landing on the surface of the moon in 1969 following neal armstrong down the ladder. we orch call him the second man on the moon, but that seems unfair. that he landed at the same time. he was the second one down the ladder and is still one of america s pioneers. he was still using that
week he got pneumonia and pulmonary edema and weave got a yank you and start over again. he said, no, no, and two seals he persevered and got it done. he persevered, started all over again and ended up being in running man, running for honor man of his platoon and he didn t get honor man, but. molly: got you. an amazing young man with determination and fortitude and he willingly stood out in the the direct line of fire three times the day he was killed. i i ve been to iraq and saw the area, he could have stayed below the wall and waited for backups and his budies would have been killed, but mark would have been with me today celebrating mother s day. that s not who that young man was, he valued other people s lives more than his own and made the choice to willingly give up his life so his budies