blank blaeng. >> let me finish tonight with this tragic story of christopher dorner, this ex-police officerd in the california foothills. we live in a big country, so many people living lives of challenge and joy and sadness and, so often, basic human triumph. people grow up, they survive the tough time of adolescence and they get passed the taunts and the cliquishness of high school. we get by the challenge of finding work, of finding someone to be loved by. we find children who come our way, meeting as strangers, actually, when you have them and then committing to our lives. this is how 300 plus million of us do it. we do. we make it. we live lives that end up making good sense to those around us. sometimes it's all in the way we think or feel or can't do either. it all breaks down and we, too, become danger, even lethal. when these things happen, we make the news and we feel something. as we watch the story of a man killing others, killing out of vengeance or human interest itself, what do we make of it? it's easy to tell these stories, and we did, i did, here on television.