keith morrison: then 8:00 am, amber arrived at the kennels. and still, the dogs were upset. they would not settle in that morning. keith morrison: odd. then someone told her mark was still around. he mustn t have left yet for seattle. and i thought that was strange, because he had supposed to be gone over an hour prior. keith morrison: she walked to the house where mark made a habit of leaving the carport door unlocked so the employees could use the bathroom. and i had noticed a little bit of blood in the driveway. i was afraid that his dog had opened her stitches, because she d had surgery. keith morrison: mark s dog, ding, wasn t just any pet. she was a highly skilled protection dog. a lot of blood? a little blood? a little blood. keith morrison: but noticeable. noticeable. and i proceeded towards the house and tried to go through the back door and it was locked, which was very, very odd. keith morrison: then, not long after, stephanie arrived and noticed perhaps 100 yards from where
the middle of the hallway saying, you know and i work at san francisco general hospital serving an underserved patient population, the majority of whom are homeless. and i have people coming down who are working at the hospital who will say, oh, she mustn t be a terrorist because she has a badge on. and these are words that we hear, that i hear in the halls of my working environment. so this exists in all places. i was almost run over the other day by a patient leaving the hospital who stuck out his middle finger and called me you f-ing b because i was a muslim. and that s very hurtful to me that despite me being a contributory model citizen of my country that i am being attacked and being unwelcomed. and i d like to also add that with donald trump addressing syrian refugees as if they are this third-class citizen, i have worked with syrian refugees on
more acute of the anti-muslim rhetoric or the certain questions that would be asked because of my hijab. at the same time i do want to say that there have been so many people who have been outpouring in their support and love but unfortunately those voices get drowned in the hate. i have had people approach me in the middle of the hallway saying, you know and i work at san francisco general hospital serving an underserved patient population, the majority of whom are homeless. and i have people coming down who are working at the hospital who will say, oh, she mustn t be a terrorist because she has a badge on. and these are words that we hear, that i hear in the halls of my working environment.
unfortunately those voices get drowned in the hate. i have had people approach me in the middle of the hallway saying, you know and i work at san francisco general hospital serving an underserved patient population, the majority of whom are homeless. and i have people coming down who are working at the hospital who will say, oh, she mustn t be a terrorist because she has a badge on. and these are words that we hear, that i hear in the halls of my working environment. so this exists in all places. i was almost run over the other day by a patient leaving the hospital who stuck out his middle finger and called me you f-ing b because i was a muslim. f-ing b because i was a muslim. and that s very hurtful to me that despite me being a
that s the people i support. unfortunately when we see the people that walk in the street and the government handles the crisis in a very bad way. as we look at the newspapers around america and the world on the situation gaddafi finds himself in, what s your take? well, it will be great to see this guy go. this is 41 years. this has descended into the world thuggery, sending the aircraft to strife the streets of your capital city. it s amazing. his own ambassadors walked off yesterday and said, we re done with this regime. he can t survive, can he? no. he mustn t. and this country is, as i understand, it s more tribal. it s it s a desert country with with a lot of oil and gas. very rich. he s controlled it with his family clan for 40 years. so is it like is it going to be a situation somewhat like