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0:00 My name is Myron Thompson 0:02 I am a United States district judge 0:04 and I am a polio survivor. 0:08 I was completely paralyzed at age 2. 0:11 It was 1949 0:13 in the segregated South 0:15 and people like me didn't receive adequate health care from White hospitals. 0:20 Luckily, my mother took me to the Infantile Paralysis Center 0:23 on Tuskegee Institute's college campus. 0:27 It was one of the only places where 0:29 Black polio patients like me could receive care. 0:34 And thanks to my caretakers, I, now, walk the halls 0:38 of an historic courthouse in Montgomery, Alabama. 0:42 A courthouse that played a significant role in the Civil Rights movement. 0:47 Both the Infantile Paralysis Center 0:50 and this courthouse have taught me 0:53 that all people should be treated with dignity and respect.
