- 7 months ago
Disaster Transbian episode 75
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00:00Transcription by CastingWords
00:30The superintendent has afforded a condemnment opportunity to make a last statement.
00:44He has declined to make a last statement.
00:47Are you ready, superintendent?
00:48Are you ready?
01:18Open your eyes, no doubt, just like us.
01:23You are the wind, never out, just like us.
01:34You are the wind, never out, just like us.
01:36You are the wind, never out, just like us.
01:38You are the wind, never out, just like us.
01:40With these images seen on national TV counselors, their parents should monitor what children are watching.
01:48You know, I don't believe that there's a genocide going on, and I don't think Israel's intention is genocide.
02:00I don't believe there's any evidence of genocide.
02:04There is genocide going on in the Mideast.
02:07But it's a genocide of Jews, and it's a genocide of Christians, and nobody's complaining about it for some reason.
02:13And there are much worse wars than what's happening in Gaza right now.
02:18But for some reason, people don't want to complain unless it's Jews who are looking to blame.
02:24Okay, here we go.
02:44A short, short version.
02:45Ibn Atan was a commercial pilot, and as a gimmick for the elections of 1965, he bought a little airplane, painted it white and put name peace, and said,
03:00if I am elected to the Knesset, I will fly to Egypt.
03:03He was not elected.
03:04A very small number of people voted for him.
03:06But by that time, he became very serious of this.
03:11So one day, without any announcement, he took off with this plane.
03:18A.B. Natan landed in Port Said, Egypt, in February 1966.
03:23Egyptians treated him very nicely.
03:31They did not let him into Egypt, but they let him fill his tank with gasoline and sent him back.
03:47But Israel still had a major concern.
03:51The MiG-21.
03:53A high-performance, supersonic Soviet fighter.
03:58It formed the backbone of the Arab Air Forces.
04:04But it, too, would soon give up its secrets.
04:07In August 1966, an Iraqi pilot landed in Israel with his men.
04:13Danny Shapira, our chief test pilot of the Air Force, checked the airplane, and we knew all its disadvantages of the MiG-21,
04:20which was the airplane of the war in the enemy hands.
04:23He had been offered a million US dollars to defend, but it would turn out to be worth every cent.
04:31But it's hearted him in Port Said, A low-voltев
05:20In Washington, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson issued a stark warning to whichever side
05:35should start the war. It was a thinly veiled threat to the Egyptian leadership.
05:50I said to you, if we were to go to Israel, we would have to go to the first攻撃.
05:58So the military leader said that I don't want this topic.
06:04I said to him, are we going to fight the first攻撃 and fight America and Israel?
06:15Or do we fight the first攻撃 and fight Israel?
06:19In fact, Israel, though apparently the underdog, was far more prepared for war than any of
06:31its Arab opponents.
06:34An aerial strike to destroy the Egyptian air force on the ground.
06:47In the early hours of the 5th of June 1967, the Israeli air force prepared to deliver the
06:55air force.
06:56The first blow.
06:57When we wake up in the morning and came to the briefing room, we wrote on the blackboards
07:05the hours, which was 7.45.
07:10Two hundred Israeli jets took to the air.
07:35They would arrive over Egyptian airfields at exactly 7.45 a.m.
07:52To avoid radar detection, they flew first north, then west over the Mediterranean.
08:00Turning south, the planes came in from the north, not from the east, as the Egyptians had anticipated.
08:07Two pilots came out from the conditions under the倒box and they fell off.
08:14But we've focused on them, and it turned out to the alert.
08:18And the air force of the sailors had been no longer.
08:19And the wind was reaching and no longer.
08:20We've focused on them, and the wind was moving.
08:22And the wind was moving forward to the river.
08:23And the wind was shining away on its radio.
08:26Then the wind was continuing to the river.
08:32So, it was not the wind.
08:34The wind was rampant up.
09:37Ironically, Cairo Radio was carrying false reports of the total failure of the enemy's
09:44air attack.
09:44With news coming in of Egypt's apparent success, Jordan, Syria and Iraq now launch their own
10:00airstrikes.
10:30I really think that there is no example in the history of world aviation of such a total
10:54strike and a total attack.
10:55Maybe the only time that you can compare it with Pearl Harbor, the attack of the Japanese
11:01on Pearl Harbor, which was also a great surprise attack, which almost detonated the American
11:06fleet in the Pacific.
11:07They had occupied the whole of the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip.
11:15They had occupied the whole of the Sinai Peninsula and the Gaza Strip.
11:32We were punished for the war.
11:33We fought against the nuclear war.
11:34We fought against the Allies in the capital war.
11:35We fought against the Allies in the Allies, and we fought against the Allies.
11:37When I was killed, I didn't have an answer, and after I had an answer,
11:43and we removed and removed from this loss,
11:47it was a good feeling.
13:07Love, love, love
13:11Love, love, love
13:16There's nothing you can do that can't be done
13:24Nothing you can sing that can't be sung
13:29Nothing you can say but you can learn how to play the game
13:33It's easy
13:36Nothing you can make but can't be paid
13:42No one you can save but can't be saved
13:47Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you inside
13:51It's easy
13:53All you need is love
13:59Israel found itself governing and being responsible for
14:04a million Palestinians in the newly occupied Gaza Strip, West Bank and Jerusalem
14:10I took about six months to roam around the newly occupied territories
14:22Mostly in the West Bank and Gaza and I came back
14:26And I said, look, there's another people there and they have a national movement
14:34So what do we do?
14:38Either we conquer them and create a sort of an apartheid state
14:44Or we have the love into a predominantly Jewish state called Israel
14:52And the West Bank and Gaza should be a basis for future negotiations
14:58A recognition of their rights to have a state of their own
15:02A vibrant state of their own in the West Bank and Gaza
15:05All you need is love
15:07All you need is love
15:12What Israel chose was, and still remains, the first option
15:17In the aftermath of the war, Israel declared what it called the unification of Jerusalem
15:25The entire holy city was placed under Israeli jurisdiction
15:31Including Christian and Muslim holy sites
15:35Why any, narcissistic, self-indulgent people with a simple philosophy?
15:40Give me that, it's mine!
15:42Give me that, it's mine!
15:45Yaakov, you know this is not your house
15:47Yes, but if I go, you don't go back
15:49So what's the problem?
15:50Why are you yelling at me?
15:51I didn't do this
15:52I didn't do this
15:53But you
15:53It's easy to yell at me, but I didn't do this
15:55You are stealing my house
15:58And if I don't steal it, someone else is going to steal it
16:00No, no one is going, no one is allowed to steal it
16:04That is to say that we have obligations and privileges and duties there
16:13Obligation and privilege to maintain law and order
16:18Let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let's go, let
16:48I'm talking about the law and order
16:51They know the one they are
16:53Law and the border
16:56There's no justice in life
17:05I'm talking about the law
17:10I'm talking about the law
17:13Yeah eeeep
17:18I'm talking about the law
17:23I'm talking about the law
17:25Everything is great
17:27We should not have peace
17:36They don't want us to be Jewish
17:38Therefore we prefer to die
17:39And not to go to the army
17:40Go! Go! Go! Go!
18:10Let's try
18:40He's not here, he's not here, he's not here.
18:48I'm sick!
18:54He's not here!
19:05He's got him!
19:10And to provide the people with services and with suitable standards of living as a government, like every government towards its citizen.
19:34Furthermore, and in defiance of international law, Israeli settlers began to move into the West Bank, the territory they called Judea and Samaria.
19:52And he told these pro-Israel supporters what they wanted to hear, a promise that he won't negotiate with any Palestinians who refuse to accept Israel's existence.
20:04But if we hope to advance peace with the Palestinians, then it's time that we admitted another truth.
20:14This conflict has raged for nearly a century because the Palestinians refused to end it.
20:22They refused to accept the Jewish state.
20:25The Prime Minister spoke one day after U.S. President Barack Obama did.
20:32Last week, Obama set off a firestorm by declaring that any renewed peace talks should start with the 1967 borders and include negotiated land swaps, a position he repeated on Sunday.
20:46Netanyahu fired back.
20:48More than once, Heckler's disrupted Netanyahu's speech, and he mocked one of them in return.
21:10You think they have these protests in Gaza?
21:22And that's how a Israel was made!
21:25Whoa, whoa, whoa.
21:28Alright, I got really sidetracked.
21:30I was trying to review the assassination of Robert F. Kennedy.
21:33And, you know, I just talk about one thing, I end up talking about something else.
21:37But that's what happens, man.
21:39My name is Serhan Serhan.
21:41I'm 78 years old and have been incarcerated for 54 years in the California Department of Defense.
21:47This call and your telephone number will be monitored and recorded.
21:52Serhan Bisara Serhan, born March 19, 1944, is a Palestinian Jordanian convicted of assassinating Senator Robert F. Kennedy, Sr.,
22:03a younger brother of American President, John F. Kennedy, and a candidate for the Democratic nomination in the 1968 United States presidential election.
22:14On June 5th, 1968, Sr. Han shot and mortally wounded Robert Kennedy shortly after midnight at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.
22:26Kennedy died the next day at Good Samaritan Hospital.
22:30The circumstances surrounding the attack, which took place five years after his brother's assassination, have led to numerous conspiracy theories.
22:40In 1989, Sr. Han told British journalist David Frost, quote,
22:47Some scholars believe that the assassination was the first major incident of political violence in the United States stemming from the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
23:13Sr. Han carried out the attack on the first anniversary of the 1967 Arab-Israeli War,
23:21though it occurred at a time when the American public was overwhelmingly focused on the Vietnam War.
23:31Sr. Han Bisara Serhan was born into a Palestinian Christian family in Mandatory Palestine in Jerusalem's Misrara neighborhood
23:41and became a Jordanian citizen after Jordan annexed the West Bank.
23:47According to his mother, Mary, Sr. Han was traumatized as a child by the violence he witnessed in the Arab-Israeli conflict,
23:56including the death of his older brother, who was run over by a military vehicle that was swerving to evade gunfire.
24:04When Sr. Han was 12 years old, his family emigrated to the U.S., moving briefly to New York and then to California.
24:13He attended Elliott Junior High School, John Muir High School, and Pasadena City College.
24:19Shortly after the families moved to California, Sr. Han's father, Bisara, returned alone to the Middle East.
24:26Standing five feet and five inches.
24:28Oh shit, we're the same height. I could give him a little kiss on his lips.
24:35And weighing 120 pounds, at age 20, Sr. Han moved to Corona to train to be a jockey while working at a stable,
24:45but lost his job and abandoned the pursuit after suffering a head injury in a racing accident.
24:51I guess you could say it wasn't a very stable job.
24:55Sir Han never became a U.S. citizen, instead retaining his Jordanian citizenship.
25:03As an adult, Sir Han changed church denominations several times, joining Baptist and Seventh-day Adventist churches.
25:13In 1966, he joined the esoteric organization, Ancient Mystical Order of the Rose Cross, one of the Rosicrucian orders.
25:22Spooky language. Spooky language.
25:27Robert F. Kennedy was born in Brookline, Massachusetts, 1925.
25:32In 1948, he visited Palestine and wrote six dispatches for the Boston Post.
25:39He dismissed the possibility of the Jewish state becoming communist as fantastically absurd.
25:46People between the ages of 18 and 29, not just Democrats, not just leftists, 51% of people between 18 and 29 no longer support the system of capitalism.
25:56And that's not me asking you to make a radical statement about capitalism, but I'm just telling you that my experience is that the younger generation is moving left on economic issues.
26:05And I've been so excited to see how Democrats have moved left on social issues.
26:11As a gay man, I've been very proud to see you fighting for our rights and for many leaders, many democratic leaders fighting for our rights.
26:18But I wonder if there's anywhere you feel that the Democrats could move farther left to a more populist message, the way the alt-right has sort of captured this populist strain on the right wing.
26:29If you think we could make a more stark contrast to right wing economics.
26:34Well, I thank you for your question, but I have to say we're capitalists.
26:39And that's just the way it is.
26:41However, we do think that capitalism is not necessarily meeting the needs.
26:52And called it the only stabilizing factor remaining in the near and middle east.
26:59It was clearly he'd gone through a transformation.
27:01Robert Kennedy went home so upset about it.
27:05He banged his fist on the table and he pointed at every one of his children.
27:09You have to do something about this.
27:11When we see children being bombed at the rates they are, when we see hospitals being bombed,
27:15and almost, I think it's a half of the population is homeless now, that Israel has gone too far in their approach.
27:20Well, but why would you blame Israel for that?
27:22They're fighting an enemy that deliberately used civilian shields.
27:25Nobody wants to attack a hospital.
27:27It's a war crime to attack a hospital unless the enemy is using that hospital as a base.
27:31Which they were.
27:32So on November 13th, in a video shared to Twitter, which bizarrely has not yet been deleted,
27:38IDF spokesperson Daniel Hagari shared a video purporting to show proof that Hamas was operating
27:44out of the basement of Al-Rantisi Hospital in Gaza.
27:47This proof included a terrorist sign-in sheet.
27:50This list, in Arabic, in Arabic, this list, says we are in an operation.
27:59The operation against Israel started in the 7th of October.
28:03This is a Guardian list where every terrorist writes his name and every terrorist has his own shift.
28:10Now, as people who can read Arabic were very quick to point out, this is not a list of terrorist signatures
28:16written by terrorists clocking in for their terror shifts.
28:19This is a wall calendar, and the words written in the boxes are the days of the week.
28:25In 1960, John F. Kennedy, Robert's elder brother, was elected the President of the United States
28:32and appointed Robert as U.S. Attorney General.
28:36During his tenure, Robert served as John's close advisor and was associated with various
28:42decisions during the Kennedy administration.
28:44According to author Matthew A. Hayes, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, Robert acted as a de facto
28:52chief of staff, presidential agent, and intermediary for his brother, and was, quote, an indispensable
28:59partner in his successful resolution.
29:02When you're alone, and life is making you lonely, you can always go.
29:11Downtown.
29:11Downtown.
29:14When you're alone, and life is making you lonely, you can always go.
29:25Years ago, I said that I introduced myself to Paris by saying that I was a man with the
29:30company, Mrs. Kennedy, to Paris.
29:32I'm getting somewhat that same sensation as I travel around Texas.
29:36Lee Harvey Oswald purchased a Coca-Cola from a vending machine and was preparing to eat a chicken
29:43lunch.
29:43The city linger on the sidewalk rather than my activity.
29:49How can you lose?
29:52The lights are much brighter there.
29:56You can't forget all your troubles.
29:59Forget all your cares.
30:01So go downtown.
30:04Things will be great when you're downtown.
30:07No final place for sure
30:11Downtown
30:12Everything's waiting for you
30:16Downtown
30:20Downtown
30:21Don't hang around and let your problems surround you
30:29There are movie shows
30:32Downtown
30:33Maybe you know some little places to go to where they never close
30:41Downtown
30:43Just listen to the rhythm of a gentle bossing over
30:48You'll be dancing with them too before the night is over
30:53Happy again
30:55The lights are much brighter there
31:00You can't forget all your troubles
31:02Forget all your cares
31:05So go downtown
31:07Where all the lights are bright
31:10Downtown
31:11Waiting for you tonight
31:15Downtown
31:16You're gonna be alright now
31:20He's dead
31:21Downtown
31:25Downtown
31:26Downtown
31:28Downtown
31:30Downtown
31:32In November 1963, President Kennedy was assassinated and Robert was deeply affected by it
31:42Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson assumed the presidency and retained almost all prominent Kennedy advisors, including Robert, as Attorney General
31:52In 1964, polls showed that various Democrats wanted Kennedy to be Johnson's running mate in that year's presidential election. Kennedy instead organized his senatorial campaign in New York, challenging Kenneth Keating, an incongruent
32:00Republican senator. During a campaign speech, Kennedy declared his support for Israel, stating that in the event of an attack, we will stand by Israel and come to her assistance.
32:30He supported civil rights and opposed Johnson's policies regarding the Vietnam War. Wow. So he supports everyone's civil rights except for the Palestinians and opposes the Vietnam War, but supports the Israeli-Palestine War. Okay. Got it? Got it.
32:46In fact, the 1968 presidential campaign has been referred to as one of the most volatile campaigns in American history. There was strong opposition to the ongoing Vietnam War, and it was a period of social unrest with riots in major cities.
33:04Allard K. Lowenstein, a Democratic politician, organized a Dump Johnson movement to prevent Johnson's nomination as the presidential candidate, and asked Kennedy to run instead.
33:19Kennedy refused, asserting that he did not want to split the Democratic Party. Eugene McCarthy, a U.S. senator from Minnesota, then emerged as the leader of the Dump Johnson movement,
33:33and entered several state presidential primaries. In late January 1968, the Tet Offensive in Vietnam, in the view of historian Lloyd Gardner,
33:46quote, shattered hopes that the war could be won within a reasonable period of time, if ever, and broke open the cracks in the Democratic coalition.
33:56Military police got back into the compound of the two-and-a-half-million-dollar embassy complex at dawn. Before that, a platoon of Viet Cong were in control.
34:09The communist raiders never got into the main chancery building. A handful of Marines had it locked and kept them out. But the raiders were everywhere else.
34:17By daylight, Tonga Park, where the embassy is located, was a battleground. No one, unless identified, was allowed on the street.
34:24Get out! Get out, dude! Get back!
34:29An Australian military policeman was standing guard, firing warning shots to keep the street clear.
34:35The bodies of two American military policemen, who died as they tried to assault the compound, lay near their jeep across the boulevard.
34:42Gentlemen, gentlemen, how would you assess the enemy's purposes yesterday and today?
34:47The enemy, the enemy, very deceitfully has taken advantage of the Tet Truce in order to create maximum consternation within South Vietnam, particularly in the populated areas.
35:06In my opinion, this is diversionary to his main effort, which he had planned to take place in Quang Tri Province, from Laos toward Quezon and across the demilitarized zone.
35:23On March 12th, 1968, in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, McCarthy nearly defeated Johnson, with 42% to Johnson's 49% of votes.
35:38Four days later, Kennedy announced his presidential campaign.
35:42On March 31st, Johnson announced that he would not seek the presidency.
35:47Well, I don't know what will happen now.
35:56We've got some difficult days ahead.
36:00But it really doesn't matter with me now.
36:03Because I've been to the mountaintop.
36:07I don't mind.
36:08Like anybody, I would like to live a long life.
36:17Longevity has its place.
36:21But I'm not concerned about that now.
36:25I just want to do God's will.
36:29And he's allowed me to go up to the mountain.
36:32And I've looked over.
36:35And I've seen the promised land.
36:40I may not get there with you.
36:43But I want you to know tonight.
36:46That we as a people will get to the promised land.
36:50So I'm happy tonight.
36:58I'm not worried about anything.
37:00I'm not fearing any man.
37:02Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord.
37:10Four days later, civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr.
37:15was assassinated, leading to further riots in several cities.
37:20Do they know about Martin Luther King?
37:23We have left the field.
37:27Could you lower those signs, please?
37:35I have some very sad news for all of you.
37:39And that is that Martin Luther King was shot and was killed tonight.
37:43Memphis, Michigan.
37:44The same day, Kennedy gave a speech in Indianapolis, saying,
37:52What we need in the United States is not division.
37:55What we need in the United States is not hatred.
37:58What we need in the United States is not violence and lawlessness.
38:01But his love and wisdom and compassion towards one another.
38:05And a feeling of justice towards those who suffer within our country.
38:09Whether they be white or whether they be black.
38:13Let us dedicate ourselves to what the Greeks wrote so many years ago.
38:18To tame the savageness of man.
38:21And make gentle the life of this world.
38:25Let us dedicate ourselves to that.
38:27And say a prayer for our country and for our people.
38:30Thank you very much.
38:38In April, Vice President Hubert Humphrey announced his candidacy for the presidency.
38:45He mostly avoided primaries and focused on states which held caucuses.
38:49Caucus, caucus, caucus, caucus.
38:51Caucus, caucus, caucus, caucus.
38:53Contrary to Kennedy, Humphrey did not publicly oppose the Vietnam War.
39:00Then the enemy makes his move.
39:08This is it. Live or die.
39:10This is it. Live or die.
39:10Happy birthday to you.
39:27Happy birthday to you.
39:31Happy birthday to you.
39:32Happy birthday to you.
39:35Happy birthday to you.
39:38Happy birthday to you.
39:40Great British explorer George Mallory, who was to die on Mount Everest, was asked why did he want to climb it.
39:48He said because it is there.
39:51Well, space is there.
39:52And we're going to climb it.
39:53Well, I was questioned by a judge, by a protestant at that time, but I was not allowed to do that.
40:06Did you kill the president?
40:10No, I've not been charged with that.
40:11In fact, nobody has said that to me yet.
40:13And the first thing I heard about it was when the newspaper reporters in the hall asked me that question.
40:21You have been charged.
40:21Nobody said what.
40:22Sir?
40:23You have been.
40:23Nobody said what.
40:24Okay.
40:25Okay.
40:28As President Kennedy's accused assassin is shot down himself during a jail transfer.
40:33There is a theory on the road.
40:36He's been shot.
40:39He's been shot.
40:40Three on drone has been shot.
40:42One, two, two, one, the watch tower.
40:52He's been shot.
40:55I think that we're not, you know, I think we have to have tried to have the best possible
41:08relations with other countries, but I think we have to recognize that countries are going
41:12to be far more independent of us than they have been in the past, and that they're going
41:16to exercise that independence with the ways of feeling and nationalism across the world.
41:21I think that you would try to have an understanding of your position in various matters, and act
41:29in such a way that you have the support of other countries, and that you're not acting
41:33in just a unilateral way in using power across the rest of the world, but that you have an
41:38understanding of the problems of other countries, and that you also consult and work with other
41:42countries, in particular your allies, in developing a policy in foreign relations.
41:48But we're also going to have to recognize that other countries are going to be independent.
41:51I think, number one, it makes it all the more necessary to try to consult and work with them,
41:56but number two, they're going to move in a different direction.
41:58We see that in Europe, in Western Europe's relationship to us, and we see it in Eastern
42:03Europe's relationship with the Soviet Union.
42:05These countries are not going to be dominated as much by the large powers in the future as
42:10they have been in the past.
42:11And I don't think that you can tell a country, and the prime minister of a country, or head of
42:14a country, but they're sure they should not go about some of these matters.
42:19At approximately 12.02 a.m. PDT the next day, Kennedy addressed his campaign supporters
42:35in the Ambassador Hotel's Embassy Ballroom in the Mid-Wilshire, Los Angeles.
42:41At the time, the government did not provide Secret Service protection for presidential candidates.
42:47Kennedy's only security personnel were former FBI agent William Berry and two unofficial bodyguards,
42:55Olympic decathlon gold medalist Rafer Johnson and former football player Rosie Greer.
43:02At approximately 12.10 a.m., concluding his victory speech, Kennedy said,
43:07So my thanks to all of you, and on to Chicago, and let's win there!
43:12Kennedy planned to walk through the ballroom after speaking on his way to another gathering
43:17of supporters, but reporters wanted a press conference.
43:21Campaign aide Fred Dutton decided that Kennedy would forego the second gathering and instead
43:28go through the hotel's kitchen and pantry area, behind the ballroom, to the press area.
43:34Kennedy had welcomed contact with the public during the campaign, and people had often
43:39tried to touch him in excitement.
43:41Kennedy had welcomed a few words.
43:53I just want to say to all of you how much my wife and I appreciate the opportunity to meet you.
44:04Unfortunately, as we walked through the line, we didn't have an opportunity to shake hands
44:09with everybody.
44:10So, uh...
44:11Louder!
44:12Louder!
44:13Louder!
44:14Louder!
44:15Louder!
44:16Louder!
44:17That's the candidate you've got, it's as loud as I can go.
44:20Louder!
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45:01Louder!
45:02Louder!
45:03Louder!
45:04Soon after Kennedy concluded the speech, he started to exit through the ballroom
45:15when Barry stopped him and said, no, it's been changed.
45:18We're going this way.
45:20Barry and Dutton began clearing a way for Kennedy to go left through swinging doors
45:26to the kitchen corridor, but he was hemmed in by the crowd and followed
45:31Madre d'Hotel, Carl Uecker, through a back exit.
45:35Uecker led Kennedy through the kitchen area, holding his right wrist,
45:40but frequently releasing it as Kennedy shook hands with people whom he encountered.
45:46Uecker and Kennedy started down a passageway, narrowed by an ice machine
45:51and a steam table to the north.
45:54Kennedy turned to his left and shook hands with Juan Romero,
45:59just as Sirhan Sirhan stepped down from a low tray stacker beside the ice machine,
46:06rushed past Uecker, and repeatedly fired an eight-shot, 20-aught long-rifle caliber
46:12Ivor Johnson Cadet .55A revolver at point-blank range.
46:18It was made to be reported that Senator Kennedy had been shot.
46:23He's been shot?
46:25That's right.
46:25Everybody else, just please stay back.
46:30Just the doctor, come right here.
46:31I'm shot now.
46:33You're the Kennedy.
46:35And after all,
46:37you and me.
46:42Senator Kennedy has been shot.
46:45Is that possible?
46:46Is that possible?
46:48No!
46:48No!
46:48No!
46:49No!
46:49No!
46:50No!
46:51No!
46:51No!
46:52No!
46:52No!
46:53No!
46:53No!
46:54No!
46:54No!
46:55No!
46:55We're having a good time.
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