00:00If it's health care, how do we make it accessible and affordable?
00:05Housing, energy, medical care, whatever it is, how do we work together so that all of our citizens can have accessibility and affordability for the things they need for their families,
00:26for themselves, and for the communities within which we live?
00:33And so that's our challenge.
00:37And so when we see what's going on in the country today, it's time for us to turn to each other, not on each other, to each other.
00:54And figure out how can we best work together to make things better for this great country.
01:06Now I'm going to ask whoever's got the slide, and they put up slide number 13.
01:12Number 13.
01:25Y'all can let me know when it's up there.
01:29First they came, you just passed it.
01:34Many of you remember this.
01:36You've heard it over and over again.
01:38And I want you to think about this.
01:44Pastor Martin Namalia wrote this poem when he saw what was going on in Germany back in the 1930s.
01:58And he talked about the fact that people were turning on each other.
02:10First they came for the communists.
02:13And just think about what we're experiencing today.
02:19Then they came for the socialists.
02:24Think about what's going on today.
02:26Then they came for the trade unionists.
02:32Then they came for the Jews.
02:40And by the time they got to me, no one was left to speak up.
02:48I want you to look at slide number two.
02:56And then I'll be
02:57answer your question.
03:05Martin Luther King Jr. wrote these words
03:07when he was sitting in the Birmingham City Jail
03:20back in 1963.
03:24And when King wrote these words,
03:27he had received a letter
03:29from eight clergymen,
03:33one of whom had South Carolina connections,
03:37telling him that they wanted him to leave Birmingham