A lot of friends say, 'Are you ever going to feel better?' |
Basically, this is a one-month business. |
But the basic flaws are all still there, |
I don't have an inferiority complex. I just want to see my school improve, and I don't see why it can't. |
I'm happier than I thought I would be. Both [the accused being convicted] would have been better, but the important thing is that the Libyan government has been indicted in this thing. |
I've got sort of a numb feeling and a good deal of anxiety over what might happen. |
It was not written as a personal therapy. We are professionals. We have a cause and a point of view and we want to get it out as effectively as we possibly can. It's a personal story, but it was done for reasons that were other than personal. |
It's a hugely complex story. We're going over 11-and-a-half years, with the personal end to it, with the political end to it, with a legal end to it. |
It's not cool to have school spirit, but it's also because there's no way for that to happen. Students turn up, they do their homework, but in terms of integration, in terms of a school community, there isn't one at all. |
Many of them were older than her, |
That's what happens -- 270 people killed, and I may have the great pleasure of seeing these guys convicted, imprisoned and [yet] I may live long enough to see them come out of prison. |
The drama is going to come over the summer sometime when they move into the witnesses who connect Megrahi and Fahima to the bomb. To connect the guys to the bomb and to connect the bomb to Libyan intelligence, that means talking to double agents and spies and people talking behind screens. That's where they drama comes. |
The important thing is not just these two guys, but the connection with Libya. |
They get life [in prison], and [under Scottish law] life is 20 to 30 years, |
This trial will do one thing: It will serve to remind the world what really happened. |