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Good call. Then congress will be able to do even more nothing.
Well then if (and I said "IF") logical minds were to insue they should see this as an opportunity to prove themselves worthy by doing right for the American people and to show to be worthy of their party staying as a majority in the 2016 elections. Time will tell.
If the executive order gets in the way, it's not their fault obviously.
I'll never understand why so many people lose their minds every couple years over some overhyped disease. Same thing happened with H1N1, avian flu, etc... and how many people died worldwide? A few dozen? People are getting killed by their own hearts... every day... and not just a few... it's 10s of thousands!
I'll concede that ebola has the potential to become a bigger problem due to the issues outlined above:
But you still can only catch it from someone who is symptomatic, so ordinary people who do not work in healthcare shouldn't really worry at the moment.
17,000 died from H1N1 in 2009/2010. 17,000. That's more than a few dozen.
I hope that I'm so very wrong, the huge potential threat is infections showing up and multiplying faster than anyone in the medical profession can do about it.
Maybe this is the "transformation" someone promised.
I believe you are wrong and so far there has been no signs of anything getting out of hand as you mentioned.
It was Speculation, and there is a whole lot of that going around, wait until the actual facts are there to support a specific speculation before over reacting.
It is the likelihood of catching it that gets over hyped, there is a LONG list of things that are far more likely to kill you, including getting struck by lightning.
Actually that did happen with the man that died here, no one else on the plane caught it. It is not as easy to catch as you seem to believe, especially in the early stages, later stages are a different animal as the nurses can testify to. Thing is more people will get it here in the US, will it become an real crisis, very doubtful, the odds are most civilized Nations will be able to contain it and deal with it, but there truly is no way to stop it from getting here again so long as we live in the modern world.
"It is the likelihood of catching it that gets over hyped, there is a LONG list of things that are far more likely to kill you, including getting struck by lightning."
Yes, dozens if not 100s of things Americans are more likely to die from: "About 600,000 peopledie of heart disease in the United States every year–that’s 1 in every 4 deaths". So far 'Zero' Americans have died from Ebola. Will Ebola ever catch up to Heart disease? Not likely. http://www.cdc.gov/HeartDisease/facts.htm
"Actually that did happen with the man that died here, no one else on the plane caught it"
Like you said, it's the later stages of Ebola where transmission is most likely!
With all of the other viruses and diseases killing people in the millions each year, Ebola with 4000 deaths to date is not even close to being on the top 10. Top Ten Deadliest Diseases in the World - Crunkish
Then there is the mortality rate of Ebola, which is 50% in West Africa. Even though the sample size is small, in the west 0 people have died from Ebola.
I actually don't really think it is.
Is it all going to kill us tomorrow and do we need to head for the hills? No.
Do we need to seriously step up coordinated aid, institute travel restrictions, and carefully think through quarantine usage? YES.
In many ways, people in positions of authority aren't taking this seriously enough. And the problem will grow much worse and be harder to deal with down the road...so the time is now.
You stop epidemics at the source, not wait for them to spread.
I have not read it(never heard of it)...can you give me a short cliff notes summary?
Hot Zone? True story written in 1994.
First few chapters describe in detail an Ebola outbreak in Africa in 1980 and exactly what happens as the virus attaches to a human host.
The main part of the story takes place in the late 80's in Reston, Va, outside of DC in what now is called the Monkey House, then a quarantine holding place for imported monkeys. An Army team evaluates the monkeys during quarantine. Monkeys start dying. A strain of Ebola is eventually suspected.
It is believed to be airborne. The monkeys have to be killed and disposed. There's an element of politics/turf war between the Army and the few CDC experts with field experience with Ebola. Accidents happen. People don't self report.
Dead monkeys are transported by Army officers in the back of a car. Everyone involved seems to be doing the best they can to contain the situation. The media is reasonably managed to avoid a public panic.
They eventually achieve their goal. No one died.The virus was eventually determined to not be transferable to humans and is now called the Reston Ebola Virus.
Anyone think Reagan had a clue?
BTW, the former Monkey House now houses a private Day Care facility.
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