elementary school, could have, should have been confronted sooner. parents demanding answers. why? why were police reluctant to immediately engage with the gunman? one explanation the texas department of public safety initially gave to cnn is that the officers could have been shot or killed, but we now know the mind-set goes directly against texas protocol for school shooter situations, which uvalde police trained for just two months ago. the manual states as first responders, we must recognize that innocent life must be defended. a first responder unwilling to place the lives of the innocent above their own safety should consider another career field. armed officers circled the building and up to 19 of them were inside a school hallway just feet away, kids and teachers in two classrooms were utterly helpless against the gunman. young kids, some covered in the blood of their friends dialed 911 begging for help. nearly 80 minutes after the gunman first entered the building he
most police departments are not properly training the average officer to encounter a scenario like that. you know, what i would describe as familiarization, not training. to me, training is providing the officers the ability to train in a stressful environment and enable them to perform under stress. you know, i worked in the training environment for a number of years, and we used to say that, you know, individuals don t rise to the occasion. they fall back on their training, and so i do see that as being wholly inadequate in our law enforcement community today. let me this sounds boring, but let me tell you what michael said is not going to be emphasized. we should be picking up on this, the difference between familiarization and training,
days when these investors should have had their money but they didn t because the u.s. was deadbeat and wasn t paying when we said we would. ultimately, that whole affair ended up hiking the interest rates. sounds boring, but it ends up being really expensive. the treasury had to pay higher interest rates on bonds that it wanted to issue thereafter, which means we ve got to pay people more money for the privilege of them lending us something. interest rights got hiked by a little more than 0.5%, and it may not sound like much, but that hike in the interest rates didn t go back down when the crisis was averted. we proved ourselves to be untrustworthy, and so the hike in the interest rates stuck with us as a sort of penalty for having screwed up. and if you add up the cost of all the extra interest payments we had to make because of that screw-up, in the first decade alone after that little technical just for a second glitchy default in 1979, we spent $12 billion that we would not have o
days when these investors should have had their money but they didn t because the u.s. was deadbeat and wasn t paying when we said we would. ultimately, that whole affair ended up hiking the interest rates. sounds boring, but it ends up being really expensive. the treasury had to pay higher interest rates on bonds that it wanted to issue thereafter, which means we ve got to pay people more money for the privilege of them lending us something. interest rights got hiked by a little more than 0.5%, and it may not sound like much, but that hike in the interest rates didn t go back down when the crisis was averted. we proved ourselves to be untrustworthy, and so the hike in the interest rates stuck with us as a sort of penalty for having screwed up. and if you add up the cost of all the extra interest payments we had to make because of that screw-up, in the first decade alone after that little technical just for a second glitchy default in 1979, we spent $12 billion that we would not have o
this is just politics i m bring in one as a consultant thank you. i will keep you i would keep you on message until the week before and i would bring forward that next woman. would you have a problem with that? you know how i m going to win? i really mean this. releasing policy position papers. sounds boring, right? we re bringing labor and people together to go autoout and knock on doors. we ll having a discussion because here is the difference, elliott s problem is he believes there is one set of rules for elliott and another for the rest of us. when i release five years of taxes and say look, i want to be comptroller, here is the money i make. he won t release taxes. it s a level playing field. i have to go out and get thousands of contributions. he won t go into the campaign finance even though he said he would. these are issues voters in new york care about. i ll get you to, star, in a second but i want to bring in a man that knows how the story came to light and h