quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a real solution versus anothe
that lesson was learned quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a rea
quickly, it only took once, i do not pull irons any more. what about other types of pain? do we learn our lessons first time or in such a rush to feel better we leave before class ending? when something terrible happens we want to move on, it is human nature, a defense mechanism. we change the subject. we avoid the topic, we move on so the pain will stop. but in our haste to feel better, do we sometimes leave before the lesson is learned? not a single person of good conscious who does not grieve in the aftermath of a mass killing. because the weight is heavy, we don t want to linger and move othe risk is we leave before the lesson is learned. so the pain hurts but it does not alter us. there is yet another classroom full of dead children and teachers, will this time be different? history says no. what did we learn? what changed? did the pain hurt or did the pain alter. if we re open to change, the question is what, how, what would work, what is a real solution versus anothe
While there have been major developments in areas such as data security, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence over the past year, threat actors are becoming increasingly.
great talking to you. trey: this week, fbi director chris wray revealed bureau thwarted iranian cyberattack on a boston children s hospital, that hospital sees hundreds of patients a day. while the attack was stopped, another example of high leverage potential targets that countries like china and iran could attack. joining us utah congressman chris stewart, you have been talking about cyber security longer than anyone that i know, did this surprise you? are we really still negotiating with iran? yes, it is.