By Alan
Caruba
If President Obama does not want the
Ebola virus to kill Americans, why has his administration done nothing to
restrict any flights from Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone, the hot spots in
Africa where it appears the virus is spreading?
One of the reason flights from Liberia
were not stopped, we have been told, was the historical link of the U.S. with
that nation, founded as a place freed slaves could migrate. That is no excuse in
the face of the threat of a single Liberian with Ebola getting off a flight in
any U.S. airport.
The decision not to stop flights has
nothing to do with health and everything to do with politics, Obama’s far left
ideology, and his dislike for America that has been on display for anyone paying
any attention. It has driven every decision Obama has made since first taking
office.
The White House has decided that
stopping flights would heighten public concerns, possibly creating an aura of
panic. This is a very bad, very lethal decision. It demonstrates the
indifference to facts and to common sense for which the White House is now
famous.
Every poll demonstrates that Americans
want our borders protected and access from West Africa denied.
It is likely that the White House
wants to tamp down any sense of heightened public concern until the midterm
elections on Nov. 4. Then add to that the criminal lack of truthfulness that has
accompanied anything affecting this White House has done from Benghazi to
setting free five Taliban generals in exchange for someone likely to be deemed a
deserter from the U.S. Army.
When the Director of the Centers for
Disease Control (CDC), Dr. Thomas Friedman, became the focus of news media
inquiries regarding the virus, it was clear that he did not have any greater
knowledge of the problem, other than the scope of its threat, than anyone else.
Indeed, within a week of his first press conference, he said that the CDC and
U.S. medical community needed to come up with a whole new approach to
Ebola.
When Thomas Duncan, the Liberian in
whom the virus was not initially detected died, we were treated to scenes of
intensive decontamination efforts at the Dallas hospital, but a nurse who
treated him became the first U.S. victim and Dr. Friedman was quick to blame a
“protocol breach” as the likely reason. Now a second nurse has
Ebola.
The likely reason can be found in the
fact that thousands of people die every year from viruses and infections they
acquire at a hospital.
The first and likely the
second nurse wore protective outfits from top to bottom while dealing with
Duncan. In Africa, the earliest victims have been the doctors and hospital staff
tending those with Ebola. Any U.S. medical personnel returning from Africa
should be quarantined after they arrive. The President has dispatched more than
4,000 military personnel to Liberia and their quarantine should be far longer
than the 21 days we keep hearing about. We are now hearing it should be up to 40
days.
The notion that airport staff has any
capacity at all to spot someone with Ebola is ludicrous, yet we are being
treated to the charade of passengers having a device waved over them to detect a
fever.
All this is a political approach
rather than a medical one. It is political theatre.
One example of this was a statement by
Dr. Francis Collins, the head of the National Institutes of Health, who blamed
the lack of funding the NIH has received for research, including vaccinations
for infectious diseases. He noted that the NIH has been working on Ebola
vaccines since 2001, but does it strike anyone as odd that in all the time since
then nothing has been developed?
In fairness, though, the NIH budget
has declined 23% over the past decade. The current budget, however, is $29.31
billion. That is a substantial amount.
Congress represents more politics. Dr.
Collins remarked that it did not appear “enthusiastic” about passing an
emergency supplemental appropriation. For those in government the only answer to
any problem is to throw more money at it.
Worse, a Democratic Party
advertisement even claimed that the Ebola threat is due to Republican cuts in
funding of healthcare research, but those cuts were bipartisan by virtue of the
sequestration limits imposed. Not mentioned was an Obama administration decision
to abandon a set of regulations which the CDC considered essential to prevent
international travelers from spreading deadly diseases inside the U.S. At this
point, the question is why?
So far Ebola has been located in West
Africa, but in this world of global air travel, but without rigid
restrictions it is only a matter of time before it begins to show up elsewhere
including here again.
When that happens you can point a
finger at Barack Hussein Obama who thinks it’s more important to have good
relations with Liberia than it is to shut down any possibility that an African
or anyone else at risk of having Ebola will arrive on our
shores.
At that point, however, it will be too
late.
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