The dreaded ebola virus, that insidiously lethal disease that has many African countries operating on lockdown and in a state-of-emergency, has finally made U.S. landfall.
This from CBS DFW, Dallas:
“Officials with the Centers for Disease Control have confirmed that a person in Dallas definitely has the Ebola virus. Tuesday’s official determination makes the Dallas patient the first diagnosed Ebola case in the United States.”
“On Monday, a patient in a Dallas hospital was being tested for the Ebola virus and was being kept in strict isolation with test results pending, hospital officials said Monday.”
This news is not very suprising but it is utterly alarming. We don’t know much about the patient yet, but we do know this from CBSDFW:
“CDC Director Thomas Frieden related the information that the individual who tested positive had traveled to Liberia. The person left Liberia on September 19 and arrived in the United States on September 20 with no virus symptoms. Frieden said it was four or five days later that the patient, who is believed to be male, began developing symptoms and was ultimately admitted to Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas on Sunday, September 28.”
The first American to contract Ebola was Dr. Kent Brantly who barely survived the deadly illness, largely being due to intervention from American health care, had this to say to NationalJournal:
“It’s time to think outside the box” for ways to combat the virus’s worst outbreak in history, which continues to ravage West Africa.”
The physician was treating Ebola patients in Liberia when he tested positive for the disease on July 26. He is one of four American aid workers flown back to the United States for treatment.
Dr. Brantley issued a very dire warning:
“Many have used the analogy of a fire burning out of control to describe this unprecedented Ebola outbreak,” Brantley said. “Indeed it is a fire–it is a fire from the pit of hell. We cannot fool ourselves into thinking that the vast moat of the Atlantic Ocean will protect us from the flames of this fire. Instead we must mobilize the resources…to keep entire nations from being reduced to ashes.”
I think maybe it’s time to restrict travel to and from these African countries that are plaqued with this disease. I also think it’s time we shore up that porous unsecured southern border of ours as I emphatically wrote about here and quoted Texan rancher Cuban “Rusty” Monsees as saying about the border:
“We get kids. We get adults. The cartel is bringing across, importing people from as far away as the Mediterranean. I’ve talked to agents and they picked up some characters from Somalia, Iran, Iraq, Syria… anything that you can think of these agents are having to deal with.”
Yes, I believe it’s crucial beyond measure we start taking our borders, our immigration policies, and the threats to our country far more seriously. This first case of Ebola in our general population should be a wake-up call of the highest magnitude. Something wicked this way comes.
Updates will be frequent as this situation unfolds.
“entire nations being reduced to ashes”
We can do that.
Sounds like it’d be pretty damn effective too.
One has to wonder what the individual who had the Georgia Guidestones created with its “sustainable earth message” reference to needing to reduce the population to 500,000,000 million (from the current 7+ billion) is thinking right now. Many elitists seem to think this way.
If Ebola were to get out of control in the US, it would be chaos, absolute Hell. However, the people most affected would be where the most people are confined to the tightest geographical areas: in other words, heavily, heavily blue cities that vote Democrat in huge margins and suck welfare dollars like crazy.
Nobody wants this to happen, but you have to think about things like this.
The most affected areas would be the cities and they would become nightmare zones.
Those of us out-in-the-sticks would not be unaffected, by any means. Aside from the disease itself, such mass pandemonium of millions of people in the cities would spill over from them into the surrounding countryside.
If I am correct, the graphic of the US map I posted with this article is the CDC quarantine zones and how they have divided up the US in case of such an emergency.
Crowded places, like sporting events, concerts, public transportation, etc, are always disease vectors – but the worst by far are schools. Country or city, the law requires everyone under 16 to attend school. One kid gets the flu, and 3 days later 70% of the school has it – and they bring it home to the rest of us.
I’m not convinced we’re looking at a pandemic like the 1918 flu or the Black Plague, but I will admit that it is not out of the realm of possibility. If that were to happen, cities might fare worse initially – as they did in the 1918 epidemic – but almost no areas would be untouched.
Another factor is if Mexico becomes infected – illegal immigrants could infect and reinfect every town, berg, and city near the border, overwhelming medical facilities and essentially closing down entire regions.
Thank God our medical professionals are more competent than our political officials.
Xavier, see my new article regarding your comment:
“Thank God our medical professionals are more competent than our political officials.”
Unfortunately, our medical professionals as a whole seem no more proficient than our political officials.
As far as the bubonic plague, some scientists believe it was an Ebola-like virus that killed 60% of Europe’s population: http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=117310
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