from our faculty, that to incredible work, we have faculty members that just won a grant, they are working on food waste. i learn from them. i still love to read. whenever i get a chance and have the opportunity to read, we read to the children every night, they are 12 and 14, we still read to the family, actually our daughter reads to us, that reading is another part of the continued learning it about experiencing and reading and learning. trey: and small town of west virginia to heights of, academia madame secretary thank you so much for joining me. trey, thank you so much, i hope you and your family have a great thanksgiving. trey: you too, we re following breaking news out of waukesha, wisconsin, a car has reportedly crashed
legal scholar, a political philosopher, he lectures on civil liberties what. what i find most fascinating about professor george, he was almost none of that, doubting his abilities in his first year in college, something or someone gave him confidence to keep going, do i have that right? i man with three doctorates from oxford. at one point in your life you doubted whether or not you could do the college work? that is true, trey, it is a pleasure to be with you tonight, thank you for inviting me ofirst, hearts go out to the victims and families in waukesha. i pray that no one actually dies. it is terrible to see this violence continues in our country, we need to get back
education, this news trumps that, she is also a mom. sharia are you with us? hi trey, how are you. trey: i m going great, i am so sorry this has happened for the victims and their loved ones and their families in waukesha. the challenge when someone just happens is that questions are better than the answers in terms of what we know, my guess is you know only what you have been seeing it looked like that car was traveling at a high rate of speed. you are right, i only saw a little bit of the video, i saw the car traveling. what struck me about that scene, as you mentioned i am a mom, i saw the parents with their small children. i think it is a sad day for us when you take your children out to a christmas parade. after the tough two years we had under the pandemic, then to be think ised to
reporter: to this point to witnesses we spoke to, no, only thing they said it was a male, but nothing about age or characteristics or whether they were a sane person or dealing with something. people processing what happened here. trey: our hearts break. for the people of waukesha thank you for updating us. ted williams former homicide detective. you are looking at the same them i m looking at, difference in speed of the vehicles is stark. what else are you looking for? as this is a homicide scene. it being processed, first thing we want to try to find out is the safety and
those on the streets tonight, that included a lot of families. trey: you are right. also whether or not a towns side of waukesha a town the size of waukesha, i don t know whether a small town could be prepared for something that may have casualties that go in the numbers they could go in. there is the issue of getting ambulances, and law enforcement and access to healthcare. that is a good point. in a town like this one in wisconsin, they may not have the most robust emergency response. in incidents like this in small towns across america, very often you have to call upon law enforcement and first responders from neighbors communities, and possibly statewide level. to address this. to get people to the nearest hospitals, local hospital