united nations. reflecting on the rwanda genocide four years after president clinton said, we owe to those who died and to those who survived who loved them our every effort to increase our vigilance and strengthen our stand against those who would commit such atrocities in the future here or elsewhere. he continued, indeed we owe it to all of the world of the -- people of the world who are at least because each bloodletting hastens the next as human life is degraded and violence becomes tolerated. the unimaginable, he concluded, becomes conceivable. for the thousands of the rohingya slaughtered and the hundreds of thousands who fled, the unimaginable has become all too conceivable. five months after these atrocities began, five months tomorrow in fact, the world has not heard from our president about this horrific ethnic cleansing. i want to encourage president trump to weigh in on this, to speak with moral clarity, to condemn the burmese government for executing this horrific case of ethnic cleansing, to praise and support bangladesh for opening its doors, to call on the world to provide bangladesh w