Mr. Ham said:
shader said:
Sinn Fein said:
Well, if all the chicken littles were correct before, the bird flu would have killed us all, so we are just happy to be living on borrowed time.
Hell I am more worried about the enterovirus
which is killing more kids than Ebola ever will in the US.
No one is saying for you to worry. I'm not worried about me or my family. I am, however, worried about this disease exploding through the 3rd world, killing millions and causing a major travel problem that could potentially devastate the economy. If you don't think it's possible, you aren't paying attention. It's being taken far more seriously than the bird flu. This isn't a bunch of conspiracy sites and a mass media dying for a story. This is the CDC, WHO, and many governments sounding the alarm of a potential catastrophe if it's not squashed soon.
I don't get the confidence that it cannot spread in the US. It's early yet.
I'm not saying it cannot spread in the US. The virus itself doesn't give a crap where it is. It can spread anywhere.
But I'm not "currently" worried about it spreading. The virus itself doesn't spread easy. For instance, even the kind of casual contact that I have with co-workers isn't likely to spread the disease. Why? Because I don't get in their faces all that often. I know it's early, but it appears that none of the original guy in Texas' family or any other casual contacts got the disease. It was spread to a health worker.
I think an unbelievable amount of resources are going to quickly go to Texas to head this off. They will also go to New York, LA, or any other big city that gets this. The US isn't going to allow this to get out of control this early. I firmly believe this. If they have to get to the point of quarantining all potential people who catch it, they will.
The concern right now isn't Dallas, it's Africa. If this thing explodes, if it gets all over Africa, if it makes it's way to India...it's going to be a virus that becomes endemic, or entrenched in the world. At this point, Ebola is going to be coming in all over the country at many different times. Over time, resources will be stretched thin, people will get lazy because they'll get used to working with Ebola, and it will continue to spread slowly...until enough people get it.
If this thing gets to the point where there are hundreds of thousands infected (not that far off if the rate of infections continues as is), quarantines, flight restrictions and other economic problems will cause far more problems to us than the risk of Ebola.