but as far as what caused him to become a serial killer, i think that was an excuse. so how did you, joseph, evolve to the point where you could do something that seems so cold-blooded? you get so traumatized that you just try to pay back all the pain that you suffered. that s what happened to me from the time i was a little kid was yelled at all day long, beat up, starved, it had an effect on me when i got older. just about nerin the family had alcohol family. after spending the paycheck, my brother would be fighting and cussing at each other, he d be beating her. and the landlord would bang on the side of the trailer. it would terrorize us.
another. anna coran has the story of one family who did. reporter: under a dimly lit tv studio in the cambodia capitol, a 49-year-old woman sits on stage in tears. she is sharing a story everyone in the audience knows painfully well. they ve lived through the trauma, it s etched into their weathered faces. i want to find my younger sister. the last time i saw her, ways 13, she was 10. i think she was the only family member to survive. her life was destroyed when in 1975, pot and his army began one of the largest genocides of the 20th isn try. in the space of four years, a quarter of the cambodian population was wiped out. almost 2 million people tortured, executed an starved, as a way to cleanse the nation.
psychology that s being employed in the treatment of sergeant bergdahl is something called s.e.r.e. it stands for survival, evasion, resistance and escape. i think of civilians would have been captured and killed in torturous conditions like the three women who were held in the cleveland house of horrors for ten years, raped and assaulted regularly, kept in the dark, starved, beaten, forced abortion, that sort of thing. the first thing all three of them did effectively was emerge to the loving arms of family. so i m trying to equate what they went through. i m only going to get, equally as horrifying, but doubly as long as what bergdahl s going through. i m not there understanding why
because i know my colleagues have lots to say. it s always great to see president can i call you hip hop? yeah, sure you can. okay. but in any case, when you look at the state universities that we re talking about closing, elizabeth city state, savannah, these are state universities that were starved. let me repeat that, starved. i m glad you brought that up. dr. kimbro, we should note you run a private institution. are you facing the same kind of money squeeze? yeah, it s the same thing. dr. malveaux, she s former president of bennett college and member of usf institution. she described it perfectly. we have students who really come from meager means. so if 35% of all college students nationally are eligible for the federal pell grant, on my campus, it s 78%. so i just deal with more students it isn t that they aren t academically talented.
i don t know. yes, kind of. yes, i did. i love the lioonlions. playoff implications in detroit, fourth quarter detroit down five, 2:30 to play. has the go ahead touchdown. two-point conversion fail. lions have a one-point lead. the ravens will get into field goal range. it was from 61 yards out. justin tucker from 61 nails it. that s his sixth field goal of the game. that gives baltimore a two-point lead. starved throws his third pick of the game ending detroit s chances. here s justin tucker after the game winning kick six field goals and win the game. i m happy to do it. don t get me wrong. my fantasy team is benefiting