Thứ Sáu, 25 tháng 2, 2011

Win and we're through

United's inability to find a breakthrough at the Stade Velodrome left Sir Alex Ferguson frustrated at his team's creativity in the final third of the field.
Chris Smalling and Patrice Evra both caught the manager's eye in an unspectacular last 16 first-leg display, while a late foul on Wayne Rooney drew the manager's ire. But that perhaps highlights the lack of clear-cut chances and the Reds boss says United must improve back at Old Trafford next month.
"The game was disappointing to me. OK, the pitch was lively and Marseille made sure they weren't going to lose a goal," Sir Alex told ITV Sport. "[We expected more of the team], that goes without saying. We got into some good positions at times, but it wasn't enough.
"Nil-nil can can be [dangerous] if you lose a goal at home. For us it's about winning the game. If we win the game we're through. I think we have got a good chance. The referee was in a good position [to spot a foul on Rooney] at the end. I don't know why he didn't give us the free-kick. The decision after that is straight-forward. It's a red card."
That left Sir Alex with only performances in defence as a positive to take home to Manchester. "Patrice got a bit of abuse [on his first return after the World Cup], but that's to be expected. I don't think it affected his game. It was a very sound performance from Patrice. And Chris Smalling was excellent again. The boy is improving all the time. He wants to be a player and he likes defending. He gave a tremendous demonstration of centre-back play."

We must do better

Michael Carrick is confident United can reach the Champions League quarter-finals - provided the players improve on a below-par performance in France.
The midfielder admitted the Reds' retention and use of the ball was less than impressive, hence the absence of an away goal or even the sniff of one.
"We're pretty disappointed with the performance, it just didn't happen for us," said Carrick. "Our passing wasn't great so we didn't give ourselves the chance of creating chances in the game.
"We defended well as a unit, as we've managed to do quite a few times in Europe. The clean sheet gives us a good chance of winning the tie at home.
"We're confident we can do that but we'll have to play better than tonight. The other side of our game - our attacking and possession as a team - has got to be better."
United's hosts Olympique Marseille were themselves far from menacing, even in their own intimidating arena, but Carrick denied the notion they were there for the taking.
"It's unfair on Marseille to say this was a winnable game. Any game away from home in Europe is difficult but we didn't play anywhere near our best tonight and we know that. Hopefully we can put that right when we get them back to Old Trafford.
"It's a different game at home, our record is good there but we'll have to do better than tonight."

Fixture changes for Reds

Four of United's league games in April and May will be screened live on Sky Sports.

The Reds' visit to Upton Park to take on West Ham will be the day's early kick-off on Saturday 2 April at 12:45 BST.
Two weeks later, on Saturday 16 April, United are scheduled to travel to St. James' Park to play Newcastle. Again, this game will kick-off at 12:45 BST although the match will need to be rearranged should United reach the FA Cup semi-finals which are scheduled to take place at Wembley that weekend.
United's home clash with Everton on Saturday 23 April will also kick-off at 12:45 GMT, while the Reds' visit to the Emirates to face Arsenal has been moved to Sunday 1 May, KO 14:05 BST. However, should either side be in the Champions League semi-finals the following Tuesday, the game will revert back to Saturday 30 April, KO 12:45 BST.

Vidic: One game at a time

Less than an hour after the final whistle blew at Marseille’s Stade Velodrome on Wednesday, Nemanja Vidic told reporters the return leg, to be played at Old Trafford on Tuesday 15 March, was the furthest thing from his mind.
Instead, the Serbian insisted United’s weekend visit to Wigan Athletic was already dominating his thoughts.
“I don't want to think about Marseille right now,” he said. “We have other important games to play first and the next is Wigan. We have to take three points and I believe we can.”
Indeed, the Reds play four times – and face Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal – before Marseille come to Old Trafford for the second leg, so you can understand Vidic’s reluctance to look too far ahead.
But the defender did concede positive results from those fixtures would put United in the right frame of mind to ensure qualification to the Champions League quarter-finals.
“We have a few away games to come now,” he said. “That is what we have to focus on now. We are just taking it game by game.
“If we play well in the next three games and pick up points then we will go into the next game against Marseille with confidence.
“I can’t say we are happy with a draw [from the first leg]. We always want to win. But there were some positives to take from the game: we did well in terms of defending and we kept the ball well at certain moments.
"Now we start the build-up to the next game.”
That test, a league fixture against Wigan Athletic at the DW Stadium, takes place on Saturday 26 February (15:00 GMT) and, according to Vida's team-mate Nani, could play a key role in determining the outcome of this season's Premier League title.
"We have some massive games coming up and the next few weeks are going to be very important for us," the winger said.
"We’re focused on winning every game because we know the results in the next few matches could prove decisive."

Smalling thrives on the big tests

Chris Smalling has been one of United's stand-out performers in recent games, but he is determined to prove he can become a first-choice regular.
The defender has proved a more than able deputy for Rio Ferdinand this term, but it's his displays in the win over Manchester City and the draw in Marseille that have shown beyond doubt he can handle the big occasion.
Smalling admits that he didn't expect to play quite so many important matches following a summer switch from Fulham, but he's developed a taste for it and now doesn't want to surrender his place.
"When you get the shirt and a position in the team you don't want to give it up," he said. "I understand that Rio is the main man and his are big shoes to fill. I just have to make sure whenever another opportunity arises I keep taking them.
"I know I will have to bide my time, but hopefully with these performances and the sort of games and massive occasions I have been playing in I can justify the manager's faith in me. Hopefully I get many more games because as each match passes I'm getting more confident and that will only help me improve."
The Reds are challenging in three competitions and Smalling says the players are well aware of the challenges but is confident United can produce the goods.
"It is a massive stage of the season for us," he says. "We've been at the top for a while now in the league and it's time to kick on and put a bit of space between us and the rest. As players you relish these big games. There's a real togetherness in the squad and hopefully we can kick on in every competition."

It’s all about winning

John O’Shea says the Reds must ensure they pick up three points at the JJB Stadium on Saturday no matter what.
With key league clashes coming thick and fast in the next eight days, the Irish international says it’s vital the Reds maintain their advantage at the top of the table with victory over Wigan.
“We know we have to win games now. It’s coming to that stage where wins are so vital and we’re going to have to commit men forward and really go at teams.,” he told ManUtd.com.
“This time of the season is always exciting and a period which as players we look forward to.
“We’ve watched some of the clips of Wigan and their counter-attacks and set-piece deliveries and we know if we don’t play well we’ll have a very tough day.
“With the players we have in the squad and the mentality of the team we’ll be going there to create lots of chances and hopefully we can take them.”

Rio out, Giggs returns

Rio Ferdinand and Jonny Evans will both be absent for United’s visits to Wigan Athletic and Chelsea, leaving Chris Smalling and Nemanja Vidic to continue their partnership at the centre of United’s defence.
Ferdinand and Evans are both likely to be fit for the trip to Anfield to take on Kenny Dalglish’s Liverpool next weekend. But Sir Alex Ferguson will be encouraged by the recent performances of Chris Smalling, softening the blow of Ferdinand’s absence since the start of February.
For United’s visit to the DW Stadium on Saturday, the Reds could have Ryan Giggs and Michael Owen available for selecton.
Sir Alex told reporters on Friday: “Nothing much has changed on the injury front. We’re trying to get Ryan [Giggs] fit for the Wigan game, and Michael Owen is back training and could be available. Rio and Jonny Evans should both be back for Liverpool next weekend.”
On the more longer-term injuries, Ji-sung Park (hamstring), Anderson (knee) and Antonio Valencia (ankle) are all on course for March comebacks. “Ji-sung Park is still two weeks away,” added the boss. “Anderson will probably
be back in three weeks, he’s back in Portugal now and we’ll have to see how he progresses.
“Antonio is doing well in training but it’s difficult to assess when he’ll be back. We have to make a decision on when to play him in terms of his own confidence after being out for so long. He could be back in two weeks hopefully.”
The return of Giggs and Owen could be beneficial for Saturday’s trip to Wigan, where Sir Alex is concerned about the newly relaid pitch at the DW.
“It’s obviously a concern that they’ve relaid the pitch, although I understand it’s OK," he said. "It’s be a difficult game, Wigan are a team who play fantastic football, but this time of season they’re all difficult. It’s important that we keep our momentum going because the team who is most consistent will win the league.”

Title race down to two

For much of this season the title race has looked like being one of the most open for years, but as so often is the way two teams have broken away with Sir Alex admitting that the championship crown seems likely to be heading to either Old Trafford or the Emirates.
In the last few weeks United and Arsenal have stretched their advantage over the chasing pack of Manchester City, Tottenham and Chelsea. And while the Reds have a big week of matches in the league, including a trip to Stamford Bridge, Sir Alex says it’s looking more and more likely that it’ll be either United or Arsenal lifting the Premier League trophy in May.
“I’ve said before that normally you have two teams breaking away. It’s looked open at particular moments in the season and it has been for the last few years, but then all of a sudden as you come towards to the end there are always two teams,” the boss told reporters on Friday.
“That’s the way it’s looking at the moment – I think either ourselves or Arsenal will win it.”
The Reds’ championship credentials will be put under severe pressure in the coming week with three away games on the trot, including trips to Chelsea and Liverpool.
“Our away form has not been as good as it normally is. We have these three away games now and that’s the test for us,” added Sir Alex.

Owen is our secret weapon

Competition for places and injuries have conspired against Michael Owen this season, but the 31-year-old striker is being tipped by Sir Alex to perform a crucial role for United in the run-in.
Owen is likely to feature in the first-team squad for the game at Wigan Athletic on Saturday after a training ground injury forced the striker to miss the Reds' midweek trip to Marseille. He has scored four goals in only 13 appearances this term, three of those in his four starts for the Reds. And it is Owen’s unquestionable predatory instincts that lead United’s manager to count on him as something of a secret weapon.
“Michael makes me feel guilty at times when I pick my other strikers because he is a senior player and time is obviously not on his side like it is for Chicharito and the other youngsters who make up our squad,” Sir Alex said recently.
“He is going to be a very valuable player as the season ticks on and hopefully we take on board matches in the other competitions. It will be an opportunity to give him pitch time.
“Michael has never let me down and is a phenomenal player around the box. I sense he is going to be a key man between now and the end of the season.”

Chủ Nhật, 20 tháng 2, 2011

Revolution U

Early in 2008, workers at a government-owned textile factory in the Egyptian mill town of El-Mahalla el-Kubra announced that they were going on strike on the first Sunday in April to protest high food prices and low wages. They caught the attention of a group of tech-savvy young people an hour's drive to the south in the capital city of Cairo, who started a Facebook group to organize protests and strikes on April 6 throughout Egypt in solidarity with the mill workers. To their shock, the page quickly acquired some 70,000 followers.
But what worked so smoothly online proved much more difficult on the street. Police occupied the factory in Mahalla and headed off the strike. The demonstrations there turned violent: Protesters set fire to buildings, and police started shooting, killing at least two people. The solidarity protests around Egypt, meanwhile, fizzled out, in most places blocked by police. The Facebook organizers had never agreed on tactics, whether Egyptians should stay home or fill the streets in protest. People knew they wanted to do something. But no one had a clear idea of what that something was. 
The botched April 6 protests, the leaders realized in their aftermath, had been an object lesson in the limits of social networking as a tool of democratic revolution. Facebook could bring together tens of thousands of sympathizers online, but it couldn't organize them once they logged off. It was a useful communication tool to call people to -- well, to what? The April 6 leaders did not know the answer to this question. So they decided to learn from others who did. In the summer of 2009, Mohamed Adel, a 20-year-old blogger and April 6 activist, went to Belgrade, Serbia.
The Serbian capital is home to the Center for Applied NonViolent Action and Strategies, or CANVAS, an organization run by young Serbs who had cut their teeth in the late 1990s student uprising against Slobodan Milosevic. After ousting him, they embarked on the ambitious project of figuring out how to translate their success to other countries. To the world's autocrats, they are sworn enemies -- both Venezuela's Hugo Chávez and Belarus's Aleksandr Lukashenko have condemned them by name. ("They think we are bringing a revolution in our suitcase," one of CANVAS's leaders told me.) But to a young generation of democracy activists from Harare to Rangoon to Minsk to Tehran, the young Serbs are heroes. They have worked with democracy advocates from more than 50 countries. They have advised groups of young people on how to take on some of the worst governments in the world -- and in Georgia, Ukraine, Syria-occupied Lebanon, the Maldives, and now Egypt, those young people won. 
In Belgrade, Adel took a week-long course in the strategies of nonviolent revolution. He learned how to organize people -- not on a computer, but in the streets. And most importantly, he learned how to train others. He went back to Egypt and began to teach. The April 6 Youth Movement, along with a similar group called Kefaya, became the most important organizers of the 18-day peaceful uprising that culminated in President Hosni Mubarak's departure on Feb. 11. "The April 6 Movement and Kifaya are the groups that have led the charge in actually getting protesters organized and onto the streets," a Feb. 3 report from the geopolitical analysis group Stratfor said. The tactics were straight out of CANVAS's training curriculum. "I got trained in how to conduct peaceful demonstrations, how to avoid violence, and how to face violence from the security forces … and also how to organize to get people on the streets," Adel said of his experience with the Serbs, in an interview with Al Jazeera English on Feb. 9. "We were quite amazed they did so much with so little," Srdja Popovic, one of CANVAS's leaders, told me. 
As nonviolent revolutions have swept long-ruling regimes from power in Tunisia and Egypt and threaten the rulers of nearby Algeria, Bahrain, and Yemen, the world's attention has been drawn to the causes -- generations of repressive rule -- and tools -- social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter -- animating the wave of revolt. But as the members of the April 6 movement learned, these elements alone do not a revolution make. What does? In the past, the discontented availed themselves of the sweeping forces of geopolitics: the fall of regimes in Latin America and the former Soviet bloc was largely a product of the withdrawal of superpower support for dictatorships and the consolidation of liberal democracy as a global ideal. But the global clash of ideologies is over, and plenty of dictators remain -- so what do we do?
The answer, for democratic activists in an ever-growing list of countries, is to turn to CANVAS. Better than other democracy groups, CANVAS has built a durable blueprint for  nonviolent revolution: what to do to grow from a vanload of people into a mass movement and then use those masses to topple a dictator. CANVAS has figured out how to turn a cynical, passive, and fearful public into activists. It stresses unity, discipline, and planning -- tactics that are basic to any military campaign, but are usually ignored by nonviolent revolutionaries. There will be many moments during a dictatorship that galvanize public anger: a hike in the price of oil, the assassination of an opposition leader, corrupt indifference to a natural disaster, or simply the confiscation by the police of a produce cart. In most cases, anger is not enough -- it simply flares out. Only a prepared opponent will be able to use such moments to bring down a government.
"Revolutions are often seen as spontaneous," Ivan Marovic, a former CANVAS trainer, told me in Washington a few years ago. "It looks like people just went into the street. But it's the result of months or years of preparation. It is very boring until you reach a certain point, where you can organize mass demonstrations or strikes. If it is carefully planned, by the time they start, everything is over in a matter of weeks."
CANVAS is hardly the first organization to teach people living under dictatorship the skills they can use to overthrow it; the U.S. government and its allies have funded democracy-promotion organizations around the world since the early years of the Cold War. Living under two dictatorships -- Chile under Augusto Pinochet and Nicaragua under the Sandinistas -- and visiting perhaps a dozen others, I had seen armies of them at work and served as an election monitor myself. But I had never seen anything like CANVAS.
Traditional democracy-promotion groups like to collaborate with well-credentialed opposition parties and civil society groups; CANVAS prefers to work with rookies. The theory is that established parties and organizations under a dictator are usually too tired and tainted to be able to topple him, and that hope rests instead with idealistic outsiders, often students. The Serbs are not the usual highly paid consultants in suits from wealthy countries; they look more like, well, cocky students. They bring a cowboy swagger. They radiate success. Everyone they teach wants to do what the Serbs did.
If CANVAS has torn up the old democracy-promotion playbook, it's because the group's leaders have drawn up a new one, taken from their own firsthand experience. The group traces its roots to an October 1998 meeting in a cafe in Belgrade, where Popovic, a tall, sharp-featured man, then 25 and a student of marine biology at Belgrade University, had called several of his fellow students together. At the time, Milosevic had been in office for nine years and was firmly entrenched in power. He had started and lost three wars and was in the process of launching a fourth, in Kosovo. Popovic and his friends had been active in student protests for years. They had marched for 100 days in a row, but their efforts had yielded next to nothing. "It was a meeting of desperate friends," Popovic says. "We were at the bottom of a depression."
The students christened themselves Otpor! -- "Resistance!" in Serbian -- and began rethinking revolution. The first and most daunting obstacle was the attitude of their countrymen. Surveys taken by the opposition showed that most Serbs wanted Milosevic to go. But they believed his ouster was simply impossible, or at least too dangerous to try. And Serbia's extant political opposition was hardly inspiring: Even the anti-Milosevic parties were largely vehicles for their leaders' personal ambitions.
But Otpor's founders realized that young people would participate in politics -- if it made them feel heroic and cool, part of something big. It was postmodern revolution. "Our product is a lifestyle," Marovic explained to me. "The movement isn't about the issues. It's about my identity. We're trying to make politics sexy." Traditional politicians saw their job as making speeches and their followers' job as listening to them; Otpor chose to have collective leadership, and no speeches at all. And if the organization took inspiration from Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., it also took cues from Coca-Cola, with its simple, powerful message and strong brand. Otpor's own logo was a stylized clenched fist -- an ironic, mocking expropriation of the symbol of the Serb Partisans in World War II, and of communist movements everywhere. 
Otpor steered clear of the traditional opposition tactics of marches and rallies -- partly out of necessity, because the group didn't have enough people to pull them off. Instead of political parties' gravity and bombast, Otpor adopted the sensibility of a TV show its leaders had grown up watching: Monty Python's Flying Circus. Its daily work consisted of street theater and pranks that made the government look silly and won coverage from opposition media. Wit was perhaps not always achieved, but it was always the aim.
The most famous stunt involved an oil barrel painted with Milosevic's picture. Otpor rolled it down a busy street, asking people to insert a coin in a slot for the privilege of whacking Milosevic with a bat. This was Otpor's favorite kind of prank, a dilemma action: It left the regime damned either way. If the government had let the barrel roll, it would have looked weak. But when the police stepped in, the optics were no better: The Otpor members fled, and the opposition TV the next day showed pictures of the police "arresting" a barrel and loading it into the police van. The country sniggered at these pranks -- and signed up for Otpor.
Rather than trying to avoid arrests, Otpor decided to provoke them and use them to the movement's advantage. After a few months it became evident that while police would rough up Otpor members, torture was rare and few of them would even be kept overnight. When any Otpor member was arrested, the organization sent a noisy crowd to hang out on the street outside the police station. Detainees would emerge from the police station to find a pack of opposition journalists and a cheering crowd of friends. Young men competed to rack up the most arrests. If wearing Otpor's signature fist-emblazoned black T-shirt made you an insider in the revolution, getting arrested made you a rock star. People who once thought of themselves as victims learned to think of themselves as heroes.
Two years after its founding, Otpor's 11 members had become more than 70,000. "The signal thing they did that should never be lost is that they made it OK for Serbs to say publicly that the regime was not invincible, that many Serbs shared a sense that change could come," said James O'Brien, the Clinton administration's special envoy to the Balkans. By the time Milosevic ran for reelection as president of Yugoslavia in September 2000, Otpor's prolonged protest campaign -- and Milosevic's attempts to suppress it -- had eroded the president's popularity and emboldened and helped to unify the opposition. When Milosevic refused to concede defeat to opposition candidate Vojislav Kostunica, Otpor's example of disciplined nonviolence, along with its masses of activists, were crucial in convincing Serbia's security forces to defy Milosevic's orders to shoot at the protesters. On Oct. 6, the embattled president resigned.
The unthinkable had happened. For the young Serbs, the next step was figuring out how to export it.
Within a few months of Milosevic's ouster, Otpor's leaders began to get calls from democracy activists in other countries eager to copy the movement's success. Slobodan Djinovic, one of Otpor's original organizers, began traveling to Belarus, meeting clandestinely with a student movement there. It was soon infiltrated, however, and eventually collapsed.
Djinovic had more success in Georgia, where a group of young people had founded a movement called Kmara! ("Enough!"). In 2002, Djinovic and other Otpor leaders began visiting, and hosting Kmara students in Serbia. After Eduard Shevardnadze, the former Soviet functionary who had served as Georgia's president since 1995, stole the country's November 2003 elections, a movement led by Kmara forced him out in what became known as the Rose Revolution. It was followed by the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, where former Otpor activists spent months advising the Pora ("It's Time") youth movement.
On a trip to South Africa to train Zimbabweans in 2003, Djinovic and Popovic decided to establish CANVAS. At the time, Popovic was a member of parliament, but he stepped down in 2004, preferring a career as an organizer and a revolutionary. Djinovic had founded Serbia's first wireless Internet service provider in 2000 and was well on his way to becoming a mogul. Today he is head of Serbia's largest private internet and phone company and funds about half of CANVAS's operating expenses and the costs for half the training workshops out of his own pocket. (CANVAS has four and a half staff employees. The trainers are veterans of successful democracy movements in five countries and are paid as contractors. CANVAS participates in some workshops financed by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, the United Nations Development Program, an international NGO called Humanity in Action, and Freedom House, an American group which gets its money from the U.S. government. But CANVAS prefers to give Washington a wide berth, in part due to Otpor's experience. Like the entire opposition to Milosevic, Otpor took money from the U.S. government, and lied about it. When the real story came out after Milosevic fell, many Otpor members quit, feeling betrayed.)
Most of CANVAS's work is with democracy activists from the middlingly repressive countries that make up the majority of the world's dictatorships. All its successes have been; the Serbs have helped overthrow the low-hanging fruit of autocracy. Whatever one might say about Shevardnadze's Georgia, it wasn't North Korea. So last year I decided to watch Popovic and Djinovic work with activists from a country that would put their ideas to the severest test yet: Burma. 
In 1962, a military coup led by Gen. Ne Win put an end to the democratic government that had ruled Burma since its independence 14 years earlier. In the intervening half-century there have only been a few brief moments when it was reasonable for the Burmese to hope for something better. Anti-government demonstrations erupted for months in 1988, but ended after soldiers killed thousands of protesters. Two years later, Burma held the first free elections since the coup. But when Aung San Suu Kyi's party, the National League for Democracy, won an overwhelming victory, the regime nullified the results.
Mass protest did not return until September 2007, when the government removed oil subsidies without warning and the price of some fuels rose by 500 percent. Buddhist monks protested the price hikes, only to be beaten by security forces. A monk in Rangoon named Ashin Kovida, a small, soft-spoken man of 24, was outraged. He sold his robes and used the money to make and photocopy a leaflet inviting the monks in Rangoon's monasteries to march. On Sept. 19, about 400 monks did, joined by students in what became known -- after one of the colors of the monks' robes -- as the Saffron Revolution.
Kovida, who now lives in exile in California, told me he was inspired by Bringing Down a Dictator, a documentary about the fall of Milosevic that had been subtitled in Burmese and circulated clandestinely in the country. He thought the government would not dare to shoot monks. He was wrong. Dozens of people were killed, and thousands of monks and nuns were arrested; some of them were handed sentences of more than 60 years. Burma's opposition fell silent again; elections were held in November, 2010, but brought the country only token change.
There are still Burmese, however, willing to take risks for real democracy. Last year, 14 of them, most of them very young, gathered in a hotel conference room outside of Burma for a CANVAS workshop. They had been brought together by a veteran opposition activist who asked to be identified only by his nickname, K2. (The presence of a reporter and photographer was carefully negotiated to protect the participants' safety: I could not identify the Burmese or mention the date or location of the workshop.)
This was new ground for the Serbs -- CANVAS had worked with Burmese exiles, but these were people who lived inside the country. The Serbs worried about the fact that the students did not know each other. Mistrust could be fatal. Popovic once taught a group that included both opposition party youth and nongovernmental groups from Zimbabwe. They were all against the dictator, Robert Mugabe -- but they also hated each other. "Endless war," was how he characterized it. In a country like Burma, people feared those they did not know. The Serbs thought that this could be trouble.
And of course, Burma was not Ukraine. The less developed the democracy movement, the longer it takes for the gears to start turning. The countries whose activists had caught on the quickest, the Serbs said, were Georgia and Vietnam. The Burmese were more likely to respond like others from totalitarian countries had. "Belarus," said Djinovic, shaking his head. "They were extremely tough to motivate -- extremely passive. I couldn't find the spark in their eyes." And then there were the North Koreans: "They were great young students in a big hotel in Seoul," Popovic told me. "We worked for two days and had no idea how the hell we were doing. People didn't change the expression on their faces. They sat like monuments. It was awful."
With Africans, Latin Americans, and Georgians, the CANVAS trainers were loose and lively -- "Serb style," Popovic called it. With people from Asia, the Middle East and most of Eastern Europe, they tried to be more formal. But while the style needed adaptation, the curriculum stayed the same. It was developed for the first two ongoing conflicts where they had worked, Zimbabwe and Belarus -- places that differed in every possible way. Middle Eastern students, Djinovic said, sometimes argued that the strategies wouldn't work in the Islamic world. But CANVAS's only successes outside the former Soviet Union had come in Lebanon and the Maldives, both predominantly Muslim countries. 
When Popovic asked the Burmese what they hoped to learn from the week, their answers focused on two issues: mobilizing people and overcoming fear. "We are afraid of what we are doing," said a tall man. "We have the 'there is nothing we can do' syndrome. We have never tasted freedom." One young woman pointed out that the government considers any meeting of more than five people to be illegal. "Nonviolent struggle is very risky," she said.
The Burmese were exhibiting the most formidable challenge facing CANVAS in countries without a history of effective opposition: the passivity, fatalism, and fear of their citizens. CANVAS's most useful lesson is how to dismantle this barrier. "At each workshop, someone comes to me and says, 'Our case is totally different,'" Djinovic told the Burmese. There was nervous laughter. But the Burmese had a point: Anyone demented enough to roll a barrel with Than Shwe's picture on it for the citizens of Rangoon to whack would be risking not a few hours in jail, but dozens of years. What could the Serbs possibly talk about?
A lot, it turned out. Some of the students said they had thought nonviolence meant passivity -- morally superior, perhaps, but naive. Popovic framed the task in terms of Sun Tzu: "I want you to see nonviolent conflict as a form of warfare -- the only difference is you don't use arms," he told them. This was new. He argued that whether nonviolence was moral or not was irrelevant: It was strategically necessary. Violence, of course, is every dictator's home court. The Otpor founders also knew they could never win wide support with violence -- every democracy struggle eventually needs to capture the middle class and at least neutralize the security forces.
Over and over again, Djinovic and Popovic hammered at another myth: that nonviolent struggle is synonymous with amassing large concentrations of people. The Serbs cautioned that marches and demonstrations should be saved for when you finally have majority support. Marches are risky -- if your turnout is poor, the movement's credibility is destroyed. And at marches, people get arrested, beaten, and shot. The authorities will try to provoke violence. One bad march can destroy a movement. Here was a point that had people nodding. "Any gathering in Rangoon is lunacy," Djinovic said.
But if not marches, then what? The Serbs showed the participants excerpts from A Force More Powerful, a documentary series about nonviolent struggles: Gandhi's Salt March, the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa, and the lunch-counter sit-ins and bus boycotts of the American civil rights movement. Popovic pointed out the planning involved in these actions, and made the group list the tactics they saw: leaflets, banners, sit-ins, boycotts, picketing, music. "South Africa and Burma have a similarity: zero free media," he said. "So how do you spread the message?"
"Songs," said a man with a mustache. "Prayers and funerals," said a middle-aged woman, the oldest in the group, a stern woman the others took to calling Auntie. Popovic pounced. "So what's interesting about using funerals?" "It's the only place people can meet," a young man said.
"Funerals are a dilemma for your opponent," said Popovic. In Zimbabwe, a gathering of five people was banned, but what if I have 5,000 people at a funeral? Whenever anyone related to the movement dies, they will gather and sing songs -- and the police will not interfere! It's a real problem to tear-gas a funeral."
The next idea was one the Serbs had learned from the American academic Gene Sharp, the author of From Dictatorship to Democracy (a book originally published in 1993 in Thailand for Burmese dissidents), who has been called the Clausewitz of nonviolence. Popovic was first introduced to Sharp's ideas in the spring of 2000 by Robert Helvey, a former U.S. Army colonel who had served as defense attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Burma in the 1980s before becoming disillusioned with armed struggle. When the Otpor members met Helvey, the movement already had 20,000 active members and a formidable reputation. But the group had hit a wall -- the movement was growing, but its leaders couldn't see how Otpor could turn that growth into the fall of Milosevic. 
Helvey showed them how. He explained Sharp's idea that a regime stays in power through the obedience of the people it governs. The goal of a democracy movement should be to persuade people to withdraw their obedience. A government is like a building held up by pillars, Sharp explained. Otpor needed to pull Milosevic's pillars into the opposition camp.
In fact, Otpor was already doing well with two important Milosevic pillars. One was old people: They had always been Milosevic's base of support, but the constant arrests of Otpor's 16-year-olds -- and the government's hysterical accusations that the students were terrorists -- were getting grandma angry. The other pillar was the police. From the beginning, Otpor had treated the police as allies-in-waiting. Otpor members delivered cookies and flowers to police stations (sometimes with a TV camera in tow). Instead of howling at police during confrontations, Otpor members would cheer them.
The Serbs recounted this to the Burmese, and added another step: the power graph, a Djinovic invention. He asked the students to list various groups with influence in society, and then chart each group's level of loyalty to the regime over time. The idea was to see which groups had fluctuated -- and what events in Burma's recent history provoked the change. From that they could glean clues about whom it was most profitable to woo.
The students put themselves in the shoes of Burma's police, workers, women, and other groups -- what did they all want? The lists they compiled were predictable in their self-interest: Students wanted private schools, businesspeople wanted a reliable banking system, farmers wanted crop subsidies. What was interesting was what the lists didn't include. "Where is democracy? Human rights?" Popovic said, pointing to the lists tacked to the wall. "People don't give a shit about these things. Normally your politicians talk about things that don't matter to people. Remember Gandhi's Salt March? The issue was not 'You Brits get out!' -- not officially. The issue was: 'We want to make salt.'"
 
Approaching midweek, the Serbs were worried. "They don't trust each other," Djinovic told me over lunch. The Burmese held a meeting on Tuesday night in K2's hotel room to air it all. They introduced themselves to each other, and set rules for the group. They figured out a common cover story to tell Burmese authorities. They ended up playing songs like "Dust in the Wind" on the guitar and singing until 3 a.m.
Things started to change the next day. Wednesday's lesson was about replacing tactics of concentration -- rallies, demonstrations, marches -- with tactics of dispersal, which are lower cost, lower pressure, and less dangerous. The Serbs talked about Chile's cacerolazos, or pot-banging sessions, which served to let people know that their neighbors, too, were against Pinochet. They explained the concept of dilemma actions, such as Otpor's stunt with the oil barrel. "Do a small thing and if it is successful, you have the confidence to do another one and another one," Popovic said. "You recruit people, train them, and keep them constantly active. You hit, proclaim victory -- and get the hell out. If it is successful, people will come to you. Participating in small successes, you build self-confidence. Nonviolent struggle changes the way people think of themselves."
The Burmese did not seem persuaded. "So we are all putting candles in our windows at a certain time," said a young man with glasses. "They might not be able to arrest 10,000 people, but they will pick one poor guy and arrest his whole family -- even his children."
Popovic agreed. "Yes, you guys have problems even if the tactic is low-risk -- if it is political," he said. "But what if the issue is the government is incapable of supplying people with electrical power?"
When the Burmese divided into small groups to invent their own dilemma actions, the first group took this advice to heart. It had decided to tackle the issue of garbage, which the Rangoon government had stopped collecting. The members proposed starting with a group of 20 young people to do the work, providing gloves and masks, and trying to recruit others to join in. Then they would go to the city government, submit a petition signed by influential people, and tell them: It's your problem. 
"OK, good. You're developing parallel institutions," said Popovic. This was Adam Michnik's strategy for Solidarity in Poland: Don't tear down institutions -- build your own. "You did this to remove bodies after Cyclone Nargis" -- the 2008 disaster that killed more than 138,000 people in Burma -- "when the government would not. Now, what if the municipality doesn't care?"
"We'll dump the garbage in front of the mayor," said a tall man. Popovic laughed. "Or you could choose a lower-risk strategy -- take pictures of the garbage and present them to authorities," he said.
When the next group came to the front of the room, its members were smiling and, oddly, taking off their shoes. Their spokeswoman, a young woman in a pink shirt who was wriggling with excitement, proposed a "Barefoot Campaign," to commemorate the monks of the Saffron Revolution, who do not wear shoes. The idea was to start with 100 young people, contacted by email and social networks. They would do something simple: go barefoot in public spaces. "We can start with the pagodas," said Pink Shirt -- no one wears shoes in a pagoda anyway. And people could walk through paint, Pink Shirt said. "We can easily measure success -- if we see barefoot people and footprints everywhere."
"When the authorities respond with arrests, how will you respond?" Auntie asked. The group had thought through this. "For safety, people can carry a pair of broken sandals in their pocket to show the police," said a cherubic-faced young man. "Or you can say, 'I'm getting ready to go running.'"
The tall man halted their excitement. "If the authorities see you leaving footprints, they will know and arrest you."
"They won't know who it was if we do it at night," said the Cherub. "Let's do it!" He pumped his fist in the air. Everyone laughed.
But the footprints were a problem -- they could quite literally lead the police to their prey. Then a soft-spoken young woman in a gauze shirt spoke up. "There are lots of stray dogs and cats," she said. "We can put a dish of paint in front of where they live so they will walk through it." Cats and dogs as the foot soldiers of democracy! They looked at each other, awed by their own brilliance, and slapped hands all around.
Near the end of the week the group watched Burma VJ, a 2008 documentary by Danish director Anders Ostergaard about a group of clandestine Burmese video journalists, whose footage, smuggled out of the country, is often the only way the outside world knows what is happening in Burma. The film takes place during the Saffron Revolution; it is precious contraband in Burma, and most of the participants had seen it before. It is a document of hope and valor, a record of a few weeks many Burmese consider the high point of their lives. But after a week of CANVAS training, the Burmese were watching it with fresh eyes.
When the film ended, Djinovic walked to the front of the room. "So what did you think?" he said. The Cherub was wide-eyed. "This was not organized!" he said. Suddenly the Saffron Revolution looked very different. It was so brave, so inspiring -- and so improvised, foolish, and irresponsible. "People were going into the streets spontaneously, asking for something that is not achievable," Djinovic told them, perhaps not gentle enough as he razed their heroes. "Our advice," he said slowly, "is that you think about nonviolent struggle totally differently than you have seen in this movie."
Silence fell over the group.
"Then you know what you have to do," he said. 
CANVAS has worked with activists from 50 countries. It cannot point to 50 revolutions.
The most prosaic reason is that often the people it trains aren't the ones in charge of a movement. Some groups, like Georgia's and Ukraine's dissidents, choose to model themselves on Otpor. In Iran, by contrast, though small groups of CANVAS trainees held successful actions, the leaders of the Green Revolution have not adopted Otpor's tactics.
The more profound reason, however, is that context matters. A very closed society, the kind that most desperately needs a strong democracy movement, is the place least able to grow one. By the end of the Burma workshop, Popovic and Djinovic were content; the students had understood the lessons. But what they could do with them was not clear. On the workshop's last day, I asked the members of the Barefoot Campaign group whether they would try to start one in Burma. The strategies were wonderful, valuable, fresh, they said -- but better for someone else. "I am not sure it's practical for me," Pink Shirt said.
The Serbs argue that a country's level of repression is not dispositive. Popovic told the Burmese that far more important than the government's brutality is their own level of skill and commitment; a well-organized and committed democracy movement can gradually win enough freedom to work. "Political space is never granted. It is always conquered," he said. It was easier to work in Serbia in 2000 than it had been in 1991 because the opposition had won important concessions over that time. "Serbia built those advantages," he said. For example, it forced Milosevic to respect local election results in 1996 that left municipal television stations in opposition hands. But could this apply to Burma? Winning political space there could take decades and there was no guarantee that the country would even move in the right direction.
Burma, however, is the extreme. Most authoritarian countries are closer to Milosevic's Serbia, or Mubarak's Egypt: autocratic governments that do permit some opposition media and political activity. Algeria, Angola, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Kazakhstan, Nicaragua, Russia, and Venezuela, to name a few, follow this model. And though the Serbs cannot carry revolution in their suitcases, their strategies can greatly increase the chance that when there is a moment that shakes a dictatorship, the opposition will be able to take advantage of it.
The Egyptian example shows how. The April 6 movement knew about Otpor and adopted the fist as its logo even before Mohamed Adel went to Belgrade. The course he took there was the same one the Burmese took. Last April, Serbian newspapers carried a front page photo of a protest in Egypt, with demonstrators waving the April 6 flag, complete with a familiar fist logo. "The Otpor fist threatening Mubarak?" the headline read. As images of demonstrators in Tahrir Square hoisting their children onto Egyptian Army tanks filtered out to the rest of the world last week, Popovic recalled that on Adel's power graph, the military loomed particularly large; it was crucial, he had realized, to pull out that pillar.
The Serbs never met Adel again, but their young Egyptian student kept emailing, occasionally pointing out mistakes in Arabic translations of CANVAS materials. He had gone home with copies of Bringing Down a Dictator subtitled in Arabic and continued to download books. He conducted miniature versions of the CANVAS workshop in Egypt, stressing unity, nonviolent discipline, the importance of clear goals, and keeping members engaged.
Just after the Jan. 25 protests began a 26-page pamphlet called "How to Protest Intelligently" -- authored anonymously, but widely attributed to the April 6 group -- began circulating in Cairo. It laid out the goals of the protests: taking over government buildings, winning over the police and Army, and protecting fellow protesters. It instructed people to carry roses, chant positive slogans, gather in their own neighborhoods, and persuade policemen to change sides by reminding them their own families could be among the protesters. It also gave practical advice on what demonstrators should wear and carry to protect themselves from tear gas and police batons. It suggested that they carry signs reading "Police and People Together Against the Regime."
The protests were a model of unity, tolerance, and nonviolent discipline. The different groups put aside their individual flags and symbols to show only the Egyptian flag and to speak, as much as possible, with one voice. Protesters swept the square clean and protected shops, detaining looters and making them give back the stolen goods. Coptic Christians in Tahrir Square formed ranks to protect the Muslims while they prayed; when the Christians celebrated Mass, the Muslims formed a ring around them. Together they embraced soldiers and faced the police with roses. They sang songs and wore silly hats. It had an authenticity that was uniquely Egyptian, but it was also textbook CANVAS.
CANVAS has worked with dissidents from almost every country in the Middle East; the region contains one of CANVAS's biggest successes, Lebanon, and one of its most disappointing failures, Iran. Popovic wonders whether Iran could turn out differently next time: What would happen if the Green Movement were to organize not around election fraud, but staged a Salt March instead, focusing on unemployment, low wages, and corruption? Iran is like Tunisia and Egypt were: a young, relatively well-educated population and a corrupt authoritarian government dependent on fear to keep people in line. "Governments that rely for decades on fear become very inflexible," said Popovic. "The pillars of the regime support it out of fear. The moment the fear factor disappears and people are fearless with the police and hugging the military, you have lost your main pillars." Hosni Mubarak no doubt would have ruefully observed the same thing.
In Burma, it is hard to imagine what can vanquish that fear -- what can turn people from passive victims into daring heroes -- unless people like Pink Shirt do it themselves. In the Middle East, however, the fear is already crumbling, and the heroism is infecting country after country. This is a huge advantage. But for dictatorship to fall throughout the region, the protesters must catch more from Egypt than audacity.










A Simple Map to the Land of Wholesome

For the first time since it began issuing dietary guidelines, the government offered new recommendations last month that clearly favor the health and well-being of consumers over hard-lobbying farm interests. 
The new science-based Dietary Guidelines for Americans, released Jan. 31 by the Departments of Agriculture and of Health and Human Services, are comprehensive, sensible, attainable and, for most people, affordable. They offer a wide variety of dietary options to help you eat better for fewer calories without undue sacrifice of dining pleasure.
Now it’s up to consumers to act on this advice and put the brakes on runaway obesity and the chronic diseases that cost billions of dollars before they kill.
It’s a lot easier than you may think, especially if you make the adaptations gradually and avoid declaring war on every deviation from the straight and narrow. Moderation, rather than constant deprivation and denial, is the key to a wholesome diet that you can stick with and enjoy. I say this with confidence because I’ve lived this way for most of my adult life and I’ve watched my sons do the same for more than four decades.
Here is a summary of the guidelines, which combine the goals of fewer calories — and especially nutrient-poor calories from sugars, fats and refined grains — with more emphasis on nutrient-dense foods:
Eat lots more vegetables and fruits, filling half your plate with them.
Choose lean meats and poultry, and replace some of them with seafood.
Consume mainly nonfat or low-fat milk and other dairy products.
Choose low-sodium products and use less salt and salty ingredients in food preparation.
Eat more fiber-rich foods; replace most refined grains and grain-based foods with whole-grain versions.
Use vegetable oils like olive and canola oil instead of solid fats like butter and margarine, but remember that all fats have lots of calories.
Eat out less; cook at home more often.
Drink water, calorie-free beverages like coffee and tea, and 100 percent fruit juice instead of regular sodas, fruit drinks and energy drinks; limit alcoholic drinks to one a day for women, two for men.
Eat less and exercise more to achieve a better balance of caloric intake and output.
Tips From the Trenches
Here are some ideas to help you put the new guidelines into practice.
Before you make any changes in your eating habits, keep a detailed food diary for a week. Write down everything you eat and drink, listing the amounts, the circumstances, your emotional state and anything else that may be relevant. That will give you a clearer picture of what you may need to modify and how to do it.
Make less seem like more by eating on smaller plates. Pay attention to what you’re eating and eat slowly. Avoid distracted eating, while watching television for example. Eat only until you are satisfied, not full. But don’t think you are eating less if you take only a small portion at first, then repeatedly go back for more. You’ll have no idea how much you really consume.
Eat more beans and peas, nuts and seeds for protein. Bake, broil or grill meats, poultry and fish. Discard skin and avoid breading. If I had to choose only one pan, it would be a stove-top grill pan with a nonstick surface. If I were allowed two, the other would be a nonstick wok-type skillet for stir-frying vegetables in a small amount of olive or vegetable oil. And if three, I’d choose a steamer.
When fresh vegetables and fruits are out of season and expensive, switch temporarily to frozen ones (plain, not packaged in sauces or sugary syrup). Make sandwiches on those new whole-wheat or multigrain sandwich thins, only 100 calories each.
Don’t be fooled by advertising. Some products that make health-related claims may be less than wholesome. Read nutrition facts on food packages (you may want to take a magnifying glass to the store). Note serving size, calories per serving, amounts of sugars, saturated and trans fats, and sodium in a serving, as well as health-promoting dietary fiber, protein and potassium. Also check the ingredients; contents are listed in order of amount (highest first). For desserts, rely more on fruits (fresh or dried), perhaps with nonfat or low-fat vanilla yogurt, than on ice cream or baked goods. Or bake your own with whole-grain flour, fruit purée and oil (a personal favorite is below). For another delicious and nutritious treat, press bite-size pitted prunes to form shallow cups and top each with a ball of finely chopped blanched almonds mixed with a little honey.
Snacks can be the undoing of an otherwise healthful diet. Nutritious choices include unsalted nuts, in moderation, and cut-up vegetables with a yogurt-based dip or hummus. Satisfy a sweet craving with fresh fruit, unsweetened dried fruit or a small bowl of a lightly sweetened whole-grain dry cereal.
When dining out, consider choosing two appetizers instead of a main course, or share an entree with a dining partner. If restaurant portions are over the top, take half home.
Adjust your caloric intake to your needs. According to the report, the average sedentary man in his 40s needs 2,200 calories a day; one who is active needs 2,800. Comparable numbers for women are 1,800 and 2,200.
If you are sedentary, start with 10-minute bouts of activity a couple of days a week and gradually build up to longer bouts more often and at a faster pace. (For an activity guide, go to www.presidentschallenge.org, click on “download tools and resources,” then on “fitness guides.” Or track your progress at www.health.gov/paguidelines, click on “be active your way,” then “keeping track of what you do each week.”)
The best way to know whether you are consuming too many calories is to monitor your weight — if it’s creeping upward, you need to eat less or move more, preferably both. I weigh myself every day to keep within a range of two pounds up or down — a strategy favored by the “successful losers” in the National Weight Control Registry, a long-term study of how people stay trim.
This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:
Correction: February 16, 2011
The Personal Health column on Tuesday, about maintaining a healthy diet, gave an incorrect Web address for the President’s Challenge Program, which offers physical fitness guides and other materials. The correct address is www.presidentschallenge.org.

Kickboxing Express and Other 30-Minute Workouts

UNTIL recently, I was convinced that a worthwhile workout meant at least an hour. But my trainer challenged me to consider 20- to 30-minute programs that she promised would push me just as hard as our 60 minutes together. When these high-intensity sessions of jumping rope and other powerful movements became even more strenuous than my longer routines, I was a convert.
Gyms around New York City were onto this idea well before I was: several offer shorter classes for those who are pressed for time or who simply don’t want to spend their lives in the gym.
The Reebok Sports Club/NY on the West Side of Manhattan, for example, has a half-hour Kickboxing Express class that its creator, Emma Paynter, said would require more effort than the traditional hourlong one.
“Since the class is so short, the intensity is revved up a notch,” she said. Students perform moves without resting, like punching arms, kicking in different directions, squatting rapidly, running in place and doing jumping jacks.
Uma Muthu Vlahoplus, a 46-year-old screenwriter who lives on the Upper East Side, said that attending the class regularly had helped her maintain her prepregnancy figure.
“I work every body part,” she said. “And since it’s much easier for me to carve out 30 minutes out of my day than an hour, I don’t have an excuse not to go.”
At Crunch Fitness, the 30-minute classes include Ripped Rotation and Sexy Stretch. In Ripped Rotation, instructors lead students through endurance-testing core moves using a six-pound weight with a flat end, called a Smart Bell. To work their lower abdominals, participants lift their legs, bend their knees, balance the weight on their shins and extend their legs without dropping the weight.
The quick moves give Steve Batista, a 42-year-old dog walker from Washington Heights, the rush he seeks when he works out. “The class gets my heart rate up quickly, which is what I love about exercising,” he said.
Physique 57, the popular workout based on the ballet barre, has a 40-minute version of its hourlong class, called the Physique Express. It starts with push-ups, planks, triceps dips and biceps curls and progresses into moves that work other muscles.
Shorter sweat sessions aren’t offered only as classes. New York Sports Clubs locations also have XpressLine, a free program supervised by trainers in which members work through machines in 22 minutes or less to hit every muscle group.
Personal trainers are also willing to cut their standard hourly sessions in half to trim the price and be more flexible. My trainer, Annette Lang, based in Brooklyn, said she pushed her clients in 30-minute sessions by incorporating moves that work multiple body parts at once, like squat with biceps curls and overhead presses followed by squat jumps.
“Working out for a short time can be even harder than a longer session,” she said.
After finally trying it, I can attest to the rigors of a compressed routine and the joys of finishing a workout that much more quickly.

Money Won’t Buy You Health Insurance

Redwood City, Calif.
THIS isn’t the story of a poor family with a mother who has a dreadful disease that bankrupts them, or with a child who has to go without vital medicines. Unlike many others, my family can afford medical care, with or without insurance.
Instead, this is a story about how broken the market for health insurance is, even for those who are healthy and who are willing and able to pay for it.
Most employees assume that if they lose their job and the health coverage that comes along with it, they’ll be able to purchase insurance somewhere. The members of Congress who want to repeal the provision of last year’s health insurance law that makes it easier for individuals to buy coverage must assume that uninsured people do not want to buy it, or are just too cheap or too poor to do so.
The truth is that individual health insurance is not easy to get.
I found this out the hard way. Six years ago, my company was acquired. Since my husband had retired a few years earlier, we found ourselves without an employer and thus without health insurance.
My husband, teenage daughter and I were all active and healthy, and I naïvely thought getting health insurance would be simple.
Why did we even need insurance? First, we wanted to know that, if we had a medical catastrophe, we would not exhaust our savings. Second, uninsured patients are billed more than the rates that insurers negotiate with doctors and hospitals, and we wanted to pay those lower rates. The difference is significant: my recent M.R.I. cost $1,300 at the “retail” rate, while the rate negotiated by the insurance company was $700.
An insurance broker helped me sort through the options. I settled on a high-deductible plan, and filled out the long application. I diligently listed the various minor complaints for which we had been seen over the years, knowing that these might turn up later and be a basis for revoking coverage if they were not disclosed.
Then the first letter arrived — denied. It never occurred to me that we would be denied! Yes, we had listed a bunch of minor ailments, but nothing serious. No cancer, no chronic diseases like asthma or diabetes, no hospital stays.
Why were we denied? What were these pre-existing conditions that put us into high-risk categories? For me, it was a corn on my toe for which my podiatrist had recommended an in-office procedure. My daughter was denied because she takes regular medication for a common teenage issue. My husband was denied because his ophthalmologist had identified a slow-growing cataract. Basically, if there is any possible procedure in your future, insurers will deny you.
The broker then proposed that the three of us make individual applications. Perhaps one or two of us might be accepted, rather than the family as a group.
As I filled out more applications, I discovered a critical error in my strategy. The first question was “Have you ever been denied health insurance”? Now my answer was yes, giving the new companies reason to be wary of my application. I learned too late that the best tactic is to apply simultaneously to as many companies as possible, so that you don’t have to admit to a denial.
I completed four applications for each of the three of us, using reams of paper. I learned to read the questions carefully. I mulled over the difference between a “condition” and “something for which you have sought treatment.” I was precise and succinct. I felt as if I was doing a deposition: Give the minimum true information, and not a word more. I was accepted by exactly one insurance company. So was my daughter, although at a 50 percent premium over the standard charge for a girl her age. My husband was also accepted by one insurer but was denied by the company that approved me.
Our premiums, which were reasonable at first, have increased substantially over the last six years; the average annual increase has been 20 percent. I now am paying premiums that are more than double what they were initially. And because these are high-deductible policies, we still are paying most of the medical bills ourselves.
The new health care reform legislation is not perfect. Nothing that complex could be. But I have no doubt that the system is broken and reform is absolutely essential. If we are not going to have universal coverage but are going to rely on employer plans, then we must offer individuals, self-employed people and small businesses a place to purchase insurance at a reasonable price.
If members of Congress feel so strongly about undoing this important legislation, perhaps we should stop providing them with health insurance. Let’s credit their pay for the amount that has been paid by the taxpayers, and let them try to buy health insurance in the individual market. My bet is that they all would be denied. Health insurance reform might suddenly not seem to them like such a bad idea.
Donna Dubinsky, a co-founder of Palm Computer and Handspring, is the chief executive of a computer software company.

Thứ Bảy, 19 tháng 2, 2011

allen

1
00:00:02,419 --> 00:00:03,712
Previously on Prison Break.

2
00:00:04,014 --> 00:00:07,466
I find it incumbent that you see the inside of a prison cell, Mr. Scofield.

3
00:00:07,716 --> 00:00:09,885
Why do you want to see Burrows so bad, anyhow?

4
00:00:10,093 --> 00:00:11,261
Because he's my brother.

5
00:00:11,345 --> 00:00:13,972
So you get yourself tossed into Fox River with him?

6
00:00:14,306 --> 00:00:16,475
To what... save him?

7
00:00:16,600 --> 00:00:17,893
...and whoever it was that set me up,

8
00:00:18,018 --> 00:00:19,770
wants me in the ground as quickly was possible.

9
00:00:19,811 --> 00:00:21,146
Look, the closer it gets,

10
00:00:21,188 --> 00:00:24,191
the more I'm worried that the bottom is gonna fall out of this whole thing.

11
00:00:24,270 --> 00:00:26,271
That's the son of a bitch that fingered Abruzzi.

12
00:00:26,363 --> 00:00:27,778
Someone found Fibanacci.

13
00:00:27,902 --> 00:00:29,405
Who was this someone?

14
00:00:29,530 --> 00:00:30,739
Why'd you hire him?

15
00:00:30,989 --> 00:00:34,409
Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

16
00:00:34,493 --> 00:00:35,994
Hey, come at me, John.

17
00:00:36,161 --> 00:00:37,246
I'm coming after you.

18
00:00:37,287 --> 00:00:38,288
I doubt it.

19
00:00:40,832 --> 00:00:42,084
I'm getting you out of here.

20
00:00:42,251 --> 00:00:42,960
It's impossible.

21
00:00:43,043 --> 00:00:44,711
Not if you designed the place, it isn't.

22
00:00:44,837 --> 00:00:45,921
You've seen the blueprints.

23
00:00:46,004 --> 00:00:47,339
Better than that.

24
00:00:48,632 --> 00:00:49,716
I've got them on me.

25
00:01:04,857 --> 00:01:08,819
You're anticipating every one of my moves, three moves in advance.

26
00:01:08,861 --> 00:01:10,737
You're a hell of a strategist, Fish.

27
00:01:11,363 --> 00:01:12,698
You ever think about Boston?

28
00:01:12,781 --> 00:01:13,532
Sure.

29
00:01:13,699 --> 00:01:15,367
Think you'll ever see it again?

30
00:01:15,492 --> 00:01:18,787
I'm a 60-year-old man with 60 years left on my ticket.

31
00:01:19,079 --> 00:01:20,497
What do you think?

32
00:01:20,664 --> 00:01:22,374
I'm thinking about going.

33
00:01:22,666 --> 00:01:25,252
Well, there's goin' and there's goin'.

34
00:01:25,335 --> 00:01:26,712
Which one you mean?

35
00:01:27,296 --> 00:01:29,089
The one you think I mean.

36
00:01:32,676 --> 00:01:36,972
Three days inside, and he's already thinking about turning rabbit.

37
00:01:37,764 --> 00:01:39,016
It'll pass.

38
00:01:39,266 --> 00:01:40,684
It always does.

39
00:01:41,977 --> 00:01:44,563
There's bigger things to worry about at the moment.

40
00:01:44,646 --> 00:01:47,482
I've been in here long enough to know it when I see it.

41
00:01:47,608 --> 00:01:49,568
The calm before the storm.

42
00:01:50,152 --> 00:01:53,780
Whites and blacks are going at each other real soon here.

43
00:01:53,906 --> 00:01:56,950
Everybody chooses sides, and a lot of guys bleed.

44
00:01:57,534 --> 00:01:58,911
There a reason?

45
00:01:59,077 --> 00:02:02,122
Same reason you don't put cats and dogs in the same cage.

46
00:02:02,289 --> 00:02:03,707
They don't get along.

47
00:02:33,779 --> 00:02:34,613
Hmm.

48
00:02:34,780 --> 00:02:35,489
What?

49
00:02:35,572 --> 00:02:36,990
Toilet won't flush.

50
00:02:37,157 --> 00:02:37,908
So?

51
00:02:38,492 --> 00:02:40,536
Means only one thing--

52
00:02:45,624 --> 00:02:48,043
The DIRT shuts off the water, so you can't flush your contraband.

53
00:02:48,126 --> 00:02:49,711
We got nothing to worry about.

54
00:02:49,962 --> 00:02:51,296
Says you!

55
00:02:55,926 --> 00:02:57,094
Under the table...

56
00:03:01,765 --> 00:03:03,183
What the hell is this?

57
00:03:03,392 --> 00:03:05,978
Insurance, white boy. Now dump it!

58
00:03:10,524 --> 00:03:11,608
Open it.

59
00:03:15,362 --> 00:03:16,154
So...

60
00:03:16,613 --> 00:03:19,241
tooling up for the race riot, are we?

61
00:03:20,033 --> 00:03:21,326
Hand it over.

62
00:03:24,288 --> 00:03:26,915
Rugheads and the billies.

63
00:03:27,791 --> 00:03:30,294
Now, which side are you on anyhow, Fish?

64
00:03:30,419 --> 00:03:31,837
That would be neither, boss.

65
00:03:31,962 --> 00:03:34,173
Maybe you're gonna go extracurricular with it then.

66
00:03:34,298 --> 00:03:35,841
Stick a C.O., maybe.

67
00:03:37,301 --> 00:03:38,468
Is there a problem here, Deputy?

68
00:03:38,552 --> 00:03:39,803
Got a shank in here.

69
00:03:42,848 --> 00:03:44,224
Is this yours?

70
00:03:53,066 --> 00:03:54,318
You're not a good liar.

71
00:03:55,694 --> 00:03:57,279
Come on, Sucre, you're going to the SHU.

72
00:04:05,245 --> 00:04:06,288
Move along, Deputy.

73
00:04:06,371 --> 00:04:07,998
I'm not done shaking this cell down yet.

74
00:04:08,081 --> 00:04:09,291
I said move along.

75
00:04:14,087 --> 00:04:16,089
In the old man's back pocket, are you?

76
00:04:16,215 --> 00:04:17,799
Well, I got news for you, Fish.

77
00:04:17,925 --> 00:04:19,843
He may run this place during the day,

78
00:04:20,093 --> 00:04:22,262
but I run it during the night.

79
00:04:24,763 --> 00:04:30,160
Transcript: RaceMan
Synchro: Travis
www.forom.com

80
00:05:01,844 --> 00:05:03,136
The hell were you thinking, Michael?

81
00:05:05,889 --> 00:05:07,266
How are we doing it?

82
00:05:07,808 --> 00:05:09,101
The infirmary.

83
00:05:09,601 --> 00:05:10,519
Infirmary?

84
00:05:11,979 --> 00:05:14,106
It's the weakest link in the security chain.

85
00:05:14,648 --> 00:05:16,149
As long as I get that PUGNAc,

86
00:05:16,358 --> 00:05:17,734
I'll get all the access I need.

87
00:05:18,026 --> 00:05:19,236
What the hell's a PUGNAc?

88
00:05:19,361 --> 00:05:22,155
It lowers my insulin levels to the point that I'm hyperglycemic.

89
00:05:22,281 --> 00:05:24,575
As long as the good doctor thinks I'm diabetic,

90
00:05:24,783 --> 00:05:27,619
I'll have plenty of time in there to do what I need to do.

91
00:05:27,703 --> 00:05:28,245
Which is?

92
00:05:28,287 --> 00:05:29,079
A little work.

93
00:05:29,204 --> 00:05:31,039
A little prep for your arrival.

94
00:05:31,665 --> 00:05:33,125
That's the idea, anyway.

95
00:05:33,208 --> 00:05:34,084
The idea?

96
00:05:34,293 --> 00:05:36,712
There's a little hitch in getting the PUGNAc, that's all.

97
00:05:37,421 --> 00:05:39,590
They don't exactly stock it at the commissary.

98
00:05:39,756 --> 00:05:41,800
You're telling me this whole thing's riding on a bunch of pills.

99
00:05:42,092 --> 00:05:43,969
Someone's working on it as we speak.

100
00:05:49,099 --> 00:05:51,643
Now's not the time to be trusting a black inmate, Michael.

101
00:05:51,768 --> 00:05:53,687
Our  relationship transcends race.

102
00:05:53,770 --> 00:05:56,273
Nothing transcends race in here.

103
00:05:56,440 --> 00:05:57,608
I can't let you do it.

104
00:05:57,774 --> 00:05:59,776
Good behavior, you're out of here in three years.

105
00:05:59,860 --> 00:06:01,236
Gonna be a whole lot sooner than that.

106
00:06:01,320 --> 00:06:02,154
Can't be done...

107
00:06:03,530 --> 00:06:04,448
Can't be done, Michael.

108
00:06:04,531 --> 00:06:05,949
No one's ever broken out of Fox River.

109
00:06:06,033 --> 00:06:07,868
Every  single step's already been mapped out.

110
00:06:07,951 --> 00:06:08,744
Every contingency.

111
00:06:08,952 --> 00:06:10,454
Every contingency?

112
00:06:11,163 --> 00:06:12,581
You may have the blueprints of this place,

113
00:06:12,664 --> 00:06:15,334
but there's one thing those plans can't show you-- people,

114
00:06:15,459 --> 00:06:16,627
guys like Abruzzi--

115
00:06:16,668 --> 00:06:19,421
you so much as look at these cats the wrong way, they'll cut you up.

116
00:06:20,506 --> 00:06:22,090
As far as the rest of these guys are concerned

117
00:06:22,216 --> 00:06:24,551
I'm just another con doing his time.

118
00:06:24,635 --> 00:06:25,719
Staying out of trouble.

119
00:06:25,844 --> 00:06:28,347
Your don't go looking for trouble in here, it just finds you.

120
00:06:28,388 --> 00:06:30,057
And when it does, we'll be long gone.

121
00:06:30,390 --> 00:06:31,600
This is madness.

122
00:06:31,683 --> 00:06:33,185
You can't even get out of your cell.

123
00:06:33,310 --> 00:06:34,353
Not true.

124
00:06:34,478 --> 00:06:35,479
What, you got a key?

125
00:06:35,896 --> 00:06:37,189
Something like that.

126
00:08:08,405 --> 00:08:09,907
Wrong piece of real estate, Fish.

127
00:08:10,073 --> 00:08:11,283
Belongs to T-Bag.

128
00:08:11,575 --> 00:08:12,534
Who?

129
00:08:13,577 --> 00:08:15,370
You best speak with respect, Fish.

130
00:08:15,454 --> 00:08:18,081
Man kidnapped half a dozen boys and girls down in 'Bama,

131
00:08:18,207 --> 00:08:19,416
raped 'em and killed 'em.

132
00:08:19,499 --> 00:08:21,418
Wasn't always in that order, either.

133
00:08:22,002 --> 00:08:23,504
Does T-Bag have a real name?

134
00:08:23,754 --> 00:08:26,215
That is my real name.

135
00:08:28,800 --> 00:08:32,012
No, no, no. Please... sit.

136
00:08:34,765 --> 00:08:38,519
So you're the new one I been hearin' all the rave reviews about.

137
00:08:39,228 --> 00:08:40,437
Scofield.

138
00:08:41,104 --> 00:08:43,440
One thing's for sure, you're just as pretty as advertised.

139
00:08:44,681 --> 00:08:45,901
Prettier, even.

140
00:08:49,404 --> 00:08:51,073
Rugheads got you scared, do they?

141
00:08:51,156 --> 00:08:51,865
Sorry?

142
00:08:51,949 --> 00:08:53,408
Assume that's why you're over here.

143
00:08:53,659 --> 00:08:54,785
Few days on the inside,

144
00:08:54,860 --> 00:08:57,871
any God-fearing white man realizes the correctional system's

145
00:08:57,993 --> 00:09:01,798
got a serious lean toward the African-American persuasion.

146
00:09:01,872 --> 00:09:02,625
I hadn't noticed.

147
00:09:02,709 --> 00:09:05,712
They got the numbers all right, so they think they do as they please.

148
00:09:05,879 --> 00:09:07,673
We got one thing they don't--

149
00:09:07,965 --> 00:09:09,174
surprise.

150
00:09:09,633 --> 00:09:12,261
We gonna take the ball game to them real soon.

151
00:09:12,761 --> 00:09:14,721
It's gonna be nasty for a first-timer like you,

152
00:09:14,805 --> 00:09:17,349
but we'll protect you. I'll protect you.

153
00:09:17,516 --> 00:09:19,101
All you got to do is...

154
00:09:20,727 --> 00:09:22,729
take this pocket right here,

155
00:09:22,813 --> 00:09:24,815
and your life'll be all peaches and cream.

156
00:09:24,898 --> 00:09:26,859
I walk, you walk with me.

157
00:09:26,984 --> 00:09:29,736
Keep you real close, so no one up in here can hurt you.

158
00:09:30,612 --> 00:09:33,031
Looks to me you already got a girlfriend.

159
00:09:36,201 --> 00:09:38,829
I got a whole 'nother pocket over here.

160
00:09:39,121 --> 00:09:40,289
I'll pass.

161
00:09:43,000 --> 00:09:44,293
I don't protect you,

162
00:09:44,418 --> 00:09:47,629
them  rugheads gonna gobble you up like a plate of black-eyed peas.

163
00:09:47,713 --> 00:09:48,630
I said no.

164
00:09:48,755 --> 00:09:50,507
Then you best move, then.

165
00:09:50,966 --> 00:09:52,050
Now.

166
00:09:56,763 --> 00:09:58,473
You come around these bleachers again,

167
00:09:59,224 --> 00:10:01,894
it's gonna be more than just words we're exchanging.

168
00:10:02,853 --> 00:10:04,146
Know what I'm saying?

169
00:10:06,815 --> 00:10:07,733
Excuse me.

170
00:10:08,066 --> 00:10:10,694
Are you the Tim Giles that represented Lincoln Burrows?

171
00:10:10,861 --> 00:10:11,653
Okay, if you're a reporter...

172
00:10:11,737 --> 00:10:14,031
I'm not a reporter. I know the defendant personally.

173
00:10:15,199 --> 00:10:16,867
Huh. You family?

174
00:10:17,117 --> 00:10:18,035
Not exactly.

175
00:10:19,036 --> 00:10:21,330
We were in a relationship a few years back.

176
00:10:21,455 --> 00:10:22,748
Well, look, ma'am, I, uh...

177
00:10:22,873 --> 00:10:25,083
I-I don't know what to tell you. I mean, the man was guilty.

178
00:10:25,167 --> 00:10:27,794
The prosecution's case was a slam dunk.

179
00:10:27,878 --> 00:10:29,963
Because the victim was the Vice President's brother.

180
00:10:30,172 --> 00:10:33,342
If you're suggesting that the federal government rammed this thing through,

181
00:10:33,425 --> 00:10:35,302
okay, I take offense to that, 'cause I fought for that guy.

182
00:10:35,385 --> 00:10:37,012
That's not what I meant.

183
00:10:37,804 --> 00:10:39,223
The evidence was there.

184
00:10:40,140 --> 00:10:41,767
Lincoln worked for Steadman's company.

185
00:10:41,892 --> 00:10:44,686
He gets into a public altercation with the guy, so, he gets fired.

186
00:10:44,770 --> 00:10:46,104
Two weeks later, Steadman's shot dead.

187
00:10:46,271 --> 00:10:47,940
The murder weapon is found in Lincoln's house,

188
00:10:48,023 --> 00:10:50,234
and the victim's blood found on his clothes.

189
00:10:50,317 --> 00:10:52,736
Trust me, there are cases you lose sleep over, but

190
00:10:52,903 --> 00:10:54,321
this isn't one of 'em.

191
00:10:56,198 --> 00:10:57,324
What about Crab Simmons?

192
00:10:57,574 --> 00:10:59,201
Lincoln said he could exonerate him.

193
00:10:59,243 --> 00:11:00,744
Why didn't you put him on the stand?

194
00:11:00,994 --> 00:11:03,163
The man's a five-time felon, all right?

195
00:11:03,247 --> 00:11:04,873
He-He... He had no credibility.

196
00:11:04,957 --> 00:11:06,875
So, you wouldn't mind if I paid him a visit.

197
00:11:07,167 --> 00:11:09,628
Be my guest, but I don't think it'd do you any good.

198
00:11:30,190 --> 00:11:33,944
Strange feeling. I don't know how to explain it.

199
00:11:36,780 --> 00:11:37,781
Now, um...

200
00:11:38,824 --> 00:11:41,660
usually, my whole life, it's always been crazy,

201
00:11:42,536 --> 00:11:43,328
noisy,

202
00:11:44,663 --> 00:11:47,332
maddening, you know, in my head, but...

203
00:11:48,417 --> 00:11:49,585
right now, it's quiet.

204
00:11:51,545 --> 00:11:52,337
It's perfect.

205
00:11:53,755 --> 00:11:55,174
Glad you came back.

206
00:11:57,634 --> 00:11:59,887
I thought about you the whole time.

207
00:12:01,096 --> 00:12:04,099
You know, I, uh, made a lot of mistakes in my life.

208
00:12:04,224 --> 00:12:05,142
I know that.

209
00:12:06,518 --> 00:12:07,936
I'm gonna make it right.

210
00:12:08,478 --> 00:12:09,730
I know you will.

211
00:12:19,114 --> 00:12:20,365
What are you doing?

212
00:12:20,532 --> 00:12:21,617
I want to remember this.

213
00:12:21,742 --> 00:12:22,326
No.

214
00:12:22,409 --> 00:12:24,494
Oh, come on. Oh, come on, V, please, just one.

215
00:12:24,745 --> 00:12:25,787
Okay.

216
00:12:36,215 --> 00:12:37,007
Easy, man.

217
00:12:37,174 --> 00:12:38,342
How we doin' on the PUGNAc?

218
00:12:38,425 --> 00:12:39,760
Hey, I'm workin' on it.

219
00:12:39,843 --> 00:12:42,054
Well, work faster. I need that stuff tonight.

220
00:12:42,262 --> 00:12:46,266
What's up there in that infirmary that you need so bad?

221
00:12:47,142 --> 00:12:49,645
You get me that PUGNAc, and maybe I'll tell you.

222
00:13:01,240 --> 00:13:02,908
Uh-uh... uh!

223
00:13:07,829 --> 00:13:09,122
Thought we had an understanding.

224
00:13:09,456 --> 00:13:11,124
This here's for the family.

225
00:13:11,416 --> 00:13:13,710
You made it pretty clear you ain't blood.

226
00:13:14,388 --> 00:13:15,712
How 'bout you hand that over?

227
00:13:29,017 --> 00:13:30,769
Nice-looking piece of steel; bit of work.

228
00:13:30,894 --> 00:13:32,688
You could do some serious damage with it.

229
00:13:34,565 --> 00:13:36,984
Question is, who was it you was plannin' on damaging?

230
00:13:38,110 --> 00:13:40,070
I seen you with the Negroes, you know.

231
00:13:40,362 --> 00:13:42,447
Well, maybe you're one of them milk chickens.

232
00:13:42,531 --> 00:13:43,699
All confused-like.

233
00:13:44,241 --> 00:13:46,827
White on the outside, black as tar on the inside.

234
00:13:47,661 --> 00:13:50,664
Maybe we ought to take a look at them insides and find out, hmm?

235
00:13:50,831 --> 00:13:51,999
Girl Scouts!

236
00:13:52,416 --> 00:13:54,251
Is there a problem over there?

237
00:13:57,212 --> 00:13:59,590
Think we'll just hang onto this, if that's okay with you.

238
00:14:00,883 --> 00:14:04,803
Hey,  I'm not gonna ask you again. Let's break up the party, ladies.

239
00:14:05,846 --> 00:14:08,182
You heard the man, little dogie.

240
00:14:10,267 --> 00:14:11,894
Get along.

241
00:15:45,696 --> 00:15:47,698
What's it take to shake down another inmate,

242
00:15:47,906 --> 00:15:49,616
get something he's taken from you?

243
00:15:50,117 --> 00:15:51,827
It would take Fibonacci.

244
00:15:51,994 --> 00:15:53,370
I'll give you Fibonacci--

245
00:15:53,912 --> 00:15:54,997
I promise you that--

246
00:15:55,747 --> 00:15:56,957
when the time is right.

247
00:15:57,207 --> 00:15:58,750
Time is right now.

248
00:15:58,959 --> 00:16:01,795
No, the time is right when you and I are both standing outside those walls.

249
00:16:02,462 --> 00:16:04,381
You're sitting on life without parole.

250
00:16:04,464 --> 00:16:06,175
You're never gonna stand outside those walls again.

251
00:16:06,425 --> 00:16:07,885
Not unless you knew someone.

252
00:16:08,552 --> 00:16:10,387
Someone who knew a way out.

253
00:16:10,762 --> 00:16:12,139
What do you say, John?

254
00:16:12,264 --> 00:16:14,641
I say I've heard nothing but blabber.

255
00:16:35,787 --> 00:16:37,372
Philly Falzone.

256
00:16:38,165 --> 00:16:38,999
It's an honor.

257
00:16:40,417 --> 00:16:41,502
What are you doing here?

258
00:16:42,377 --> 00:16:43,587
Well, I, um...

259
00:16:43,754 --> 00:16:45,839
I just thought we'd, you know, fraternize.

260
00:16:46,423 --> 00:16:48,008
He looks like it, doesn't he?

261
00:16:48,425 --> 00:16:49,510
Looks what?

262
00:16:49,718 --> 00:16:51,512
Like everybody's been saying.

263
00:16:51,595 --> 00:16:52,846
You got no sack.

264
00:16:52,971 --> 00:16:54,515
You've been neutered.

265
00:16:55,516 --> 00:16:57,559
You shouldn't talk to me like that.

266
00:16:57,893 --> 00:16:59,353
You used to pick up my laundry.

267
00:16:59,436 --> 00:17:00,604
Not anymore, John.

268
00:17:00,771 --> 00:17:04,733
John, word is that someone in here knows where Fibonacci is,

269
00:17:04,858 --> 00:17:06,276
and you're not doing anything about it.

270
00:17:06,360 --> 00:17:07,236
I'm working on it.

271
00:17:07,361 --> 00:17:09,446
Well, you're not working on it fast enough.

272
00:17:09,571 --> 00:17:12,157
Apparently, Fibonacci's coming up for air again.

273
00:17:12,658 --> 00:17:14,785
Next month, a Congressional hearing.

274
00:17:15,160 --> 00:17:18,288
Now, if he testifies at that hearing,

275
00:17:18,539 --> 00:17:20,457
a  lot of people are going down,

276
00:17:20,832 --> 00:17:21,917
including me.

277
00:17:22,835 --> 00:17:24,503
Now, I've known you a long time.

278
00:17:25,170 --> 00:17:26,547
Our wives are friends,

279
00:17:26,630 --> 00:17:28,382
our kids go to the same Catholic school.

280
00:17:29,925 --> 00:17:32,177
Now, it would be a shame

281
00:17:32,302 --> 00:17:34,555
if anything were to happen to your kids.

282
00:17:34,847 --> 00:17:36,223
I know my kids would miss them.

283
00:17:36,306 --> 00:17:37,683
You don't need to do this.

284
00:17:37,766 --> 00:17:38,600
I do.

285
00:17:39,518 --> 00:17:40,602
I'll get this guy.

286
00:17:40,978 --> 00:17:42,437
We'll get Fibonacci.

287
00:17:44,189 --> 00:17:46,233
Well, for everyone's sake, I hope you're right.

288
00:17:46,400 --> 00:17:47,651
I am.

289
00:17:47,860 --> 00:17:49,069
Be well, John.

290
00:17:50,904 --> 00:17:52,239
Thank you.

291
00:18:02,082 --> 00:18:04,251
Yo, Badge, I gotta use the phone!

292
00:18:07,296 --> 00:18:09,882
Sure, no problem. You want a pizza and a pedicure, too?

293
00:18:09,965 --> 00:18:11,008
No. It's-It's Monday, man.

294
00:18:11,091 --> 00:18:12,885
I got to call my girl. She's expecting my call...

295
00:18:12,968 --> 00:18:14,678
Put a sock in it. You got nothin' comin'.

296
00:18:14,803 --> 00:18:16,054
No, no, no...

297
00:18:24,146 --> 00:18:26,190
Hey, pull up the manifest.

298
00:18:28,275 --> 00:18:31,361
There an Allen Schweitzer in GenPop?

299
00:18:34,156 --> 00:18:35,032
Nope.

300
00:18:35,157 --> 00:18:36,700
You about the SHU?

301
00:18:37,284 --> 00:18:37,951
Nope.

302
00:18:38,202 --> 00:18:39,286
Why are you asking?

303
00:18:39,453 --> 00:18:40,579
Curious, that's all.

304
00:19:20,369 --> 00:19:21,537
You hear the trumpets, Fish?

305
00:19:22,412 --> 00:19:23,413
I know you hear 'em.

306
00:19:24,289 --> 00:19:25,374
That's Judgment Day.

307
00:19:26,291 --> 00:19:28,669
It's comin'... real soon.

308
00:19:56,029 --> 00:19:58,156
What are you doing in my cell?

309
00:20:03,370 --> 00:20:04,288
I want in.

310
00:20:14,673 --> 00:20:16,133
I'm not quite sure I heard that, Fish.

311
00:20:16,175 --> 00:20:17,593
Did you just say you're in?

312
00:20:17,676 --> 00:20:18,510
That's right.

313
00:20:18,635 --> 00:20:19,720
You know the old saying, don't you?

314
00:20:19,803 --> 00:20:21,763
In for an inch, in for a mile.

315
00:20:21,972 --> 00:20:23,015
Whatever it takes.

316
00:20:23,140 --> 00:20:24,433
You want me to fight, I'll fight.

317
00:20:24,516 --> 00:20:26,476
The bolt from the bleachers-- that's what it was for.

318
00:20:26,643 --> 00:20:30,189
Well, you want to fight, you gonna get your chance.

319
00:20:31,231 --> 00:20:31,940
Next count.

320
00:20:32,232 --> 00:20:33,984
- Tonight?
- Problem with that?

321
00:20:34,067 --> 00:20:35,694
'Cause we goin' straight at 'em.

322
00:20:36,028 --> 00:20:38,155
Better catch a square, Fish.

323
00:20:38,447 --> 00:20:40,115
We undermanned in a big way.

324
00:20:40,282 --> 00:20:41,450
All I need's a weapon.

325
00:20:41,533 --> 00:20:43,160
You  want a weapon, bitch?

326
00:20:44,703 --> 00:20:46,079
There you go.

327
00:20:47,331 --> 00:20:48,916
All prisoners return to cells.

328
00:20:49,082 --> 00:20:52,961
You gonna have to prove yourself 'fore we trust you with the heavy artillery.

329
00:20:53,128 --> 00:20:54,296
Know what I'm sayin'?

330
00:20:54,338 --> 00:20:55,255
Gates closing!

331
00:21:04,556 --> 00:21:07,518
I wanted to apologize for being so short with you before.

332
00:21:07,601 --> 00:21:08,352
No problem.

333
00:21:08,519 --> 00:21:09,853
Closer it gets to an execution,

334
00:21:10,437 --> 00:21:13,106
the harder it becomes, so that's why I wanted to give you this.

335
00:21:14,650 --> 00:21:17,319
It's the, uh, surveillance tape of the garage that night.

336
00:21:17,653 --> 00:21:20,280
It was a closed trial, so no one outside of the courtroom saw it.

337
00:21:20,405 --> 00:21:22,324
I thought it could help you out.

338
00:21:22,407 --> 00:21:23,951
- With what?
- Closure.

339
00:22:13,458 --> 00:22:14,626
Allen Schweitzer.

340
00:22:15,752 --> 00:22:17,254
That name mean anything to you?

341
00:22:19,506 --> 00:22:20,299
Should it?

342
00:22:20,465 --> 00:22:21,675
I don't know. You tell me.

343
00:22:24,636 --> 00:22:26,013
Never heard of the guy.

344
00:22:26,638 --> 00:22:27,556
Are you sure?

345
00:22:28,473 --> 00:22:29,016
Positive.

346
00:22:53,707 --> 00:22:55,584
Uh, what's up, Snowflake?

347
00:23:02,841 --> 00:23:04,676
Do you think I'm a fool?

348
00:23:06,345 --> 00:23:07,429
What are you talking about?

349
00:23:07,763 --> 00:23:10,224
I see you up there with the Hitler Youth.

350
00:23:12,601 --> 00:23:14,853
You know, I got a good mind to slash you open right now.

351
00:23:15,270 --> 00:23:16,355
It's not what you think.

352
00:23:17,272 --> 00:23:18,649
They've got something I need.

353
00:23:19,274 --> 00:23:21,527
Now, see, that's funny.

354
00:23:21,818 --> 00:23:23,904
Because I got something you need, too.

355
00:23:26,240 --> 00:23:28,534
You want your PUGNAc, Fish, huh?

356
00:23:31,954 --> 00:23:34,164
Right here, baby. It's all you.

357
00:23:37,960 --> 00:23:40,379
Listen, white boy, your luck just ran out.

358
00:23:42,005 --> 00:23:43,507
You chose the wrong side.

359
00:24:24,006 --> 00:24:27,050
Man... it's great to see your face.

360
00:24:32,306 --> 00:24:34,141
I think it's time you quit the charade, don't you?

361
00:24:35,017 --> 00:24:35,601
What?

362
00:24:35,684 --> 00:24:37,436
It's starting to ruin people's lives.

363
00:24:39,897 --> 00:24:42,107
Michael's in here because he thinks you're innocent.

364
00:24:42,691 --> 00:24:43,650
He told you.

365
00:24:44,151 --> 00:24:46,528
He hasn't told me anything, but I know, Lincoln.

366
00:24:46,904 --> 00:24:48,197
I know what he's planning.

367
00:24:49,156 --> 00:24:50,407
Call him off.

368
00:24:50,866 --> 00:24:52,868
If you love him, call him off.

369
00:24:55,204 --> 00:24:56,663
I saw the tape.

370
00:24:57,122 --> 00:24:58,624
What's on the tape's not how it went down.

371
00:24:58,665 --> 00:24:59,666
I know what I saw.

372
00:25:00,292 --> 00:25:01,793
I know what I saw.

373
00:25:01,960 --> 00:25:02,920
I was there, remember?

374
00:25:07,925 --> 00:25:08,967
I got high that night.

375
00:25:09,384 --> 00:25:10,177
I had to.

376
00:25:10,552 --> 00:25:12,304
It was the only way I could go through with it.

377
00:25:26,735 --> 00:25:28,070
I never pulled the trigger.

378
00:25:28,403 --> 00:25:29,530
The guy was already dead.

379
00:25:32,032 --> 00:25:33,033
Yeah, I know. You've told me a thousand...

380
00:25:33,200 --> 00:25:35,202
Then listen! I was set up!

381
00:25:35,327 --> 00:25:36,745
I went there that night to clear a debt.

382
00:25:36,870 --> 00:25:39,706
Crab Simmons was on my ass for the 90 grand I owed him.

383
00:25:39,790 --> 00:25:41,583
He told me the mark was some scumbag drug dealer

384
00:25:41,667 --> 00:25:43,335
and if I took it, we'd be clean.

385
00:25:43,544 --> 00:25:44,795
I never pulled the trigger.

386
00:25:44,837 --> 00:25:48,090
All I know is that somebody wanted me in the same garage as Terrence Steadman that night.

387
00:25:48,215 --> 00:25:49,842
Why would somebody want to set you up?

388
00:25:53,220 --> 00:25:55,180
It wasn't about me. It was about him.

389
00:25:55,681 --> 00:25:56,390
Steadman?

390
00:25:56,473 --> 00:25:57,266
Yes!

391
00:25:57,349 --> 00:25:58,517
The guy was like a saint.

392
00:25:58,642 --> 00:25:59,726
All the charity work,

393
00:25:59,852 --> 00:26:02,396
the environmental progress his company was making...

394
00:26:02,479 --> 00:26:06,275
About the only person in this entire country who had motive to kill him was you.

395
00:26:06,900 --> 00:26:09,069
You came all the way down here to tell me how guilty I am?

396
00:26:12,239 --> 00:26:13,657
I don't know why I came here.

397
00:26:19,454 --> 00:26:20,539
You have your life now--

398
00:26:20,873 --> 00:26:21,874
I know that--

399
00:26:22,624 --> 00:26:25,294
but if what we had before meant anything to you,

400
00:26:25,711 --> 00:26:27,546
you'd find out the truth.

401
00:26:30,549 --> 00:26:31,967
Maybe all this is the truth.

402
00:26:33,677 --> 00:26:35,095
Maybe they got it right.

403
00:27:11,798 --> 00:27:12,591
Badge!

404
00:27:12,716 --> 00:27:14,593
Open up, Badge!

405
00:27:15,052 --> 00:27:15,928
You talking again?

406
00:27:16,011 --> 00:27:16,929
It's my girl's birthday.

407
00:27:17,012 --> 00:27:18,180
Happy birthday to her, then.

408
00:27:18,263 --> 00:27:19,306
You gotta let me call her! Please!

409
00:27:19,389 --> 00:27:21,058
I'll give you a million dollars, if you let me use the phone.

410
00:27:21,141 --> 00:27:22,392
I seen your kicks, Sucre.

411
00:27:22,518 --> 00:27:24,561
You got something like 40 cents to your name.

412
00:27:24,728 --> 00:27:25,354
Please!

413
00:27:25,646 --> 00:27:27,231
God, no!

414
00:27:50,128 --> 00:27:53,382
All right. Maricruz. What are you doing? Come on.

415
00:27:53,632 --> 00:27:56,134
Yeah, it's okay, Hector. You go ahead.

416
00:27:56,218 --> 00:27:57,427
What are you talking about?

417
00:27:57,803 --> 00:27:59,263
I think I'm just going to take a cab.

418
00:27:59,680 --> 00:28:02,391
What do you mean, like, go home? I mean, you just got here.

419
00:28:06,854 --> 00:28:08,480
He didn't call you, did he?

420
00:28:11,275 --> 00:28:16,488
Look... I love Fernando to death, but the guy's a deadbeat.

421
00:28:16,655 --> 00:28:18,031
You got to move on with your life.

422
00:28:26,874 --> 00:28:27,916
Mr. Giles,

423
00:28:28,083 --> 00:28:29,209
we'd like to have a word with you, if we could.

424
00:28:29,293 --> 00:28:30,544
I really don't have time.

425
00:28:30,586 --> 00:28:32,254
I'm afraid we're going to have to insist.

426
00:28:34,339 --> 00:28:36,341
It's come to our attention that you made a FOIL request

427
00:28:36,425 --> 00:28:38,177
a couple of days ago, on the Burrows case.

428
00:28:40,012 --> 00:28:42,055
Yeah. So?

429
00:28:42,097 --> 00:28:44,474
Records show that you made a dupe of the surveillance tape.

430
00:28:44,641 --> 00:28:45,350
That's right.

431
00:28:46,351 --> 00:28:47,561
Mind us asking why?

432
00:28:48,729 --> 00:28:51,398
It's for one of Burrows' old girlfriends, man.

433
00:28:51,565 --> 00:28:53,942
She was under the impression that the guy was innocent.

434
00:28:54,067 --> 00:28:55,861
I figured it'd, you know, help her with closure.

435
00:28:55,944 --> 00:28:57,654
She's in possession of the tape now, then?

436
00:28:58,071 --> 00:28:59,364
Don't pull that card on me.

437
00:28:59,573 --> 00:29:01,200
It's the Freedom of Information Act.

438
00:29:01,408 --> 00:29:04,036
She's entitled to that tape as much as you or I are.

439
00:29:04,119 --> 00:29:06,538
Oh, no, no, no, no, no, by all means, by all means.

440
00:29:06,622 --> 00:29:08,624
- May I go now?
- Just one more thing.

441
00:29:08,957 --> 00:29:10,709
This old girlfriend of his...

442
00:29:11,376 --> 00:29:12,544
what's her name?

443
00:29:25,349 --> 00:29:26,350
Excuse me.

444
00:29:26,433 --> 00:29:27,893
Is this the Simmons residence?

445
00:29:28,143 --> 00:29:29,478
I'm Ms. Simmons.

446
00:29:29,937 --> 00:29:31,188
I'm sorry, um...

447
00:29:31,855 --> 00:29:33,440
I'm Veronica Donovan.

448
00:29:33,774 --> 00:29:36,276
I'm looking for Crab Simmons. Are you related?

449
00:29:36,568 --> 00:29:37,778
He's my son.

450
00:29:37,903 --> 00:29:38,820
Is he around?

451
00:29:39,530 --> 00:29:40,405
No.

452
00:29:40,822 --> 00:29:41,949
Could you tell me where I could find him?

453
00:29:42,032 --> 00:29:44,826
Lady, go away. I can't help you. Can't you understand that?

454
00:29:44,993 --> 00:29:46,495
I'm sorry. It's just...

455
00:29:47,955 --> 00:29:50,999
a man's life is at stake, and maybe your son can help him.

456
00:29:52,042 --> 00:29:53,710
Crab can't help nobody, lady.

457
00:29:54,253 --> 00:29:55,587
He's dead.

458
00:29:58,549 --> 00:29:59,466
I'm sorry.

459
00:30:13,146 --> 00:30:16,108
Heads up! 7-up, cons, stand your gate!

460
00:30:21,280 --> 00:30:22,698
'Bout to jump off, Fish.

461
00:30:39,047 --> 00:30:40,632
Ballard, get back on your number.

462
00:30:43,302 --> 00:30:43,802
I need backup.

463
00:30:43,886 --> 00:30:45,596
I said back on your number!

464
00:31:48,283 --> 00:31:49,868
Help me...

465
00:31:55,040 --> 00:31:56,083
Scofield!

466
00:32:33,620 --> 00:32:36,290
You're a dead man, Scofield!

467
00:32:36,748 --> 00:32:38,250
You hear me?!

468
00:32:39,042 --> 00:32:40,627
You're a dead man!

469
00:33:25,422 --> 00:33:27,049
I really don't know what to say to you gentlemen.

470
00:33:28,550 --> 00:33:30,427
I try to give you the benefit of the doubt,

471
00:33:31,053 --> 00:33:32,596
I try to treat you with respect.

472
00:33:35,224 --> 00:33:36,725
You can't even respect yourselves.

473
00:33:37,351 --> 00:33:40,062
So, there's going to be a 48-hour lockdown.

474
00:33:40,354 --> 00:33:42,189
No mess. No showers.

475
00:33:42,272 --> 00:33:43,440
No visitation.

476
00:33:44,691 --> 00:33:48,737
And I strongly suggest that you all learn to get along.

477
00:33:49,446 --> 00:33:51,156
Otherwise, the next time, it's going to be a week,

478
00:33:51,240 --> 00:33:53,492
and the time after that, it's going to be a month.

479
00:33:54,034 --> 00:33:55,202
Think about it.

480
00:34:28,485 --> 00:34:30,070
Got a Leticia Barres on the line.

481
00:34:30,571 --> 00:34:32,239
I don't know who that is. Take a message.

482
00:34:32,322 --> 00:34:34,199
She says she used to date Crab Simmons.

483
00:34:38,495 --> 00:34:40,205
Leticia, thank you for calling.

484
00:34:40,372 --> 00:34:41,665
You want to hear what I have to say,

485
00:34:41,748 --> 00:34:44,042
we meet in a public place, where they can't get to us.

486
00:34:44,126 --> 00:34:46,420
Whoa, whoa, whoa. Where who can't get to us?

487
00:34:46,503 --> 00:34:48,172
You want to hear what I have to say or not?

488
00:34:48,297 --> 00:34:50,340
'Cause if you don't, I'm going to hang up right now.

489
00:34:50,424 --> 00:34:53,051
No, no, no-- you just name the time and the place.

490
00:34:58,056 --> 00:34:59,016
Over here.

491
00:34:59,224 --> 00:35:00,475
Leticia, thanks for coming..

492
00:35:00,559 --> 00:35:01,476
Go easy, lady.

493
00:35:01,560 --> 00:35:03,061
We don't know each other, you got that?

494
00:35:03,312 --> 00:35:05,647
We'll stay out here in the open where they can't get to us.

495
00:35:05,856 --> 00:35:07,441
Where they can't do what they do.

496
00:35:09,193 --> 00:35:10,444
Only reason why I'm talking to you

497
00:35:10,527 --> 00:35:12,571
'cause they gonna kill your boy like they killed mine.

498
00:35:12,696 --> 00:35:15,073
Coroner's report says smack killed your boyfriend, Leticia.

499
00:35:15,157 --> 00:35:17,117
- It was an overdose.
- Wasn't no overdose.

500
00:35:17,242 --> 00:35:18,035
What do you mean?

501
00:35:18,118 --> 00:35:20,287
Crab didn't use. He had a bad heart.

502
00:35:20,537 --> 00:35:22,289
If he touched the stuff, it'd kill him.

503
00:35:22,414 --> 00:35:24,458
I mean, don't you think it's just the slightest bit of a coincidence

504
00:35:24,625 --> 00:35:27,002
he OD'd a week after your boyfriend's crime?

505
00:35:27,628 --> 00:35:29,880
They killed him 'cause he knew things.

506
00:35:30,297 --> 00:35:31,507
Things they didn't want to get out.

507
00:35:31,673 --> 00:35:32,216
Like what?

508
00:35:32,299 --> 00:35:34,301
Like who was really behind that hit that night.

509
00:35:34,551 --> 00:35:35,844
Wasn't Crab, that's for damn sure.

510
00:35:35,969 --> 00:35:37,513
And it sure as hell wasn't Lincoln.

511
00:35:37,679 --> 00:35:39,556
Neither of them boys knew what they were getting into.

512
00:35:39,640 --> 00:35:41,350
They were just pawns in a big game.

513
00:35:41,892 --> 00:35:42,434
What?

514
00:35:42,601 --> 00:35:43,894
- They're here.
- Who's here, Leticia?

515
00:35:44,019 --> 00:35:45,062
Don't try to follow me.

516
00:35:45,187 --> 00:35:46,688
Don't find me. I won't testify.

517
00:35:46,813 --> 00:35:48,315
Just slow down and talk to me.

518
00:35:48,482 --> 00:35:50,526
I'd get as far away from here as you can, girl.

519
00:35:50,943 --> 00:35:52,611
'Cause there ain't nobody they can't get to.

520
00:35:54,738 --> 00:35:55,781
Leticia!

521
00:36:31,275 --> 00:36:32,025
Hello?

522
00:36:32,651 --> 00:36:34,736
We have a small complication.

523
00:36:34,903 --> 00:36:36,488
There's a lawyer poking around.

524
00:36:37,072 --> 00:36:38,365
Veronica Donovan.

525
00:36:39,741 --> 00:36:40,409
Yes.

526
00:36:41,243 --> 00:36:43,662
You can handle a girl who graduated

527
00:36:43,787 --> 00:36:46,582
in the middle of her Baylor law school class.

528
00:36:47,124 --> 00:36:49,168
At least I'd like to think so,

529
00:36:49,334 --> 00:36:51,962
given the stakes of what we're dealing with here.

530
00:36:57,843 --> 00:37:01,680
Anyone that's a threat to what we're doing is expendable.

531
00:37:02,389 --> 00:37:03,307
Anyone.

532
00:37:03,599 --> 00:37:04,600
Understood.

533
00:37:04,725 --> 00:37:06,810
Then do what you need to do to make this go away.

534
00:37:21,366 --> 00:37:22,784
You there, Pretty?

535
00:37:27,956 --> 00:37:29,082
I know you're there.

536
00:37:30,334 --> 00:37:33,086
Just want you to know I'm coming for you.

537
00:37:33,921 --> 00:37:36,006
You got nowhere to run.

538
00:37:37,174 --> 00:37:40,010
You're trapped in that little hole of yours.

539
00:37:40,844 --> 00:37:44,097
Trapped like a pig I'm going to slaughter.

540
00:39:15,147 --> 00:39:16,064
Who's my 1:00?

541
00:39:16,231 --> 00:39:17,316
Uh, Michael Scofield.

542
00:39:20,861 --> 00:39:23,989
I was wrong about you, Scofield. Here's your PUGNAc.

543
00:39:24,198 --> 00:39:25,324
Little bit late.

544
00:39:25,616 --> 00:39:27,117
Better late than never, right?

545
00:39:27,201 --> 00:39:29,119
Scofield! Infirmary!

546
00:39:29,244 --> 00:39:31,038
- We'll see about that.
- Mm-hmm.

547
00:39:34,041 --> 00:39:35,667
I'm gonna find out, you know...

548
00:39:36,126 --> 00:39:37,836
what it is you're doing up there.

549
00:39:48,889 --> 00:39:49,932
How long does this take?

550
00:39:50,182 --> 00:39:51,391
It used to take hours.

551
00:39:51,517 --> 00:39:53,060
They've come a long way with the new glucose kits.

552
00:39:53,185 --> 00:39:54,811
This'll take us about ten seconds.

553
00:39:55,479 --> 00:39:57,606
Slide the strip into the meter, we're ready to go.

554
00:40:01,026 --> 00:40:01,985
I'm sure you know this,

555
00:40:02,110 --> 00:40:06,031
but average glucose for the non-diabetic is about 100 milligrams per deciliter,

556
00:40:06,198 --> 00:40:09,117
so we see a number like that here, and we know you've been misdiagnosed.

557
00:40:17,793 --> 00:40:18,794
You seem nervous.

558
00:40:20,462 --> 00:40:21,338
I do?

559
00:40:21,547 --> 00:40:22,798
You're sweating.

560
00:40:23,173 --> 00:40:24,299
Must be the needles.

561
00:40:25,092 --> 00:40:27,094
Never really got used to them.

562
00:40:27,678 --> 00:40:30,514
Somehow, with diabetes and that tattoo, I find that hard to believe.

563
00:40:32,099 --> 00:40:32,766
Ah...

564
00:40:35,394 --> 00:40:36,979
Bad news, I'm afraid.

565
00:40:40,440 --> 00:40:43,694
180 milligrams per deciliter. You're definitely diabetic.

566
00:40:50,742 --> 00:40:52,578
Do you need anything else from me?

567
00:40:53,245 --> 00:40:55,080
Arm to stick a needle in.

568
00:40:55,247 --> 00:40:56,123
Okay.

569
00:40:56,748 --> 00:40:57,791
I'll see you Wednesday.

570
00:40:59,459 --> 00:41:01,753
- Cute.
- Prisoner.

571
00:41:04,131 --> 00:41:06,300
I don't know. There's something strange about him.

572
00:41:06,633 --> 00:41:07,509
What do you mean?

573
00:41:07,676 --> 00:41:08,969
I gave him the results of his blood test,

574
00:41:09,178 --> 00:41:10,512
and there was this look on his face.

575
00:41:10,679 --> 00:41:11,638
It was, um...

576
00:41:13,599 --> 00:41:14,558
relief.

577
00:41:18,020 --> 00:41:19,021
It's all right.

578
00:41:19,104 --> 00:41:20,272
I got it.

579
00:41:20,355 --> 00:41:22,566
I'm headed over to A-Wing anyhow.

580
00:41:25,110 --> 00:41:26,820
You're positively beaming, boss.

581
00:41:27,196 --> 00:41:30,032
Got up on the right side of the bed this morning, I guess.

582
00:41:30,991 --> 00:41:31,867
Hold up.

583
00:41:32,326 --> 00:41:32,910
Sugar.

584
00:41:33,452 --> 00:41:34,620
Don't you move, Fishy.

585
00:41:37,039 --> 00:41:37,956
Hey, what are you doing?

586
00:41:38,040 --> 00:41:39,124
You're coming with us, Fish.

587
00:41:53,972 --> 00:41:58,060
This little polka you and I have been doing for a while--

588
00:41:58,352 --> 00:41:59,728
as of this moment...

589
00:42:02,189 --> 00:42:02,981
...it's over.

590
00:42:09,363 --> 00:42:10,531
Fibonacci.

591
00:42:11,406 --> 00:42:13,659
I want to know how you got to him...

592
00:42:14,117 --> 00:42:16,286
and where he is, right now.

593
00:42:16,370 --> 00:42:17,996
Not going to happen, John.

594
00:42:34,680 --> 00:42:37,516
Now, I'm going to count to three.

595
00:42:39,768 --> 00:42:40,477
One...

596
00:42:40,561 --> 00:42:42,896
I give you that information, I'm a dead man.

597
00:42:43,689 --> 00:42:46,024
You know it and I know it.

598
00:42:46,358 --> 00:42:47,234
Two...

599
00:42:49,069 --> 00:42:50,737
I'll tell you the moment we're outside those walls,

600
00:42:50,821 --> 00:42:52,114
not a second before.

601
00:42:52,197 --> 00:42:53,282
You tell me now.

602
00:42:55,784 --> 00:42:57,202
Not gonna happen, John.

603
00:42:57,578 --> 00:42:58,287
Hey...

604
00:42:58,662 --> 00:43:00,831
I'm going to give you one last chance.

605
00:43:11,675 --> 00:43:12,843
Three.



9999
00:00:0,500 --> 00:00:2,00
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