you have me confused with some other member, who's on the ignore list. PLEASE lets keep this about ANYTHING OTHER THAN GR, ANYTHING.
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Unfortunately the majority of ebola cases one will see in CT are gun owners, specifically the ones who didn't turn in their evil weapons of mass destruction. Think about it.
Well we were forced to shoot, after 2 of them made a break for it. Last thing we want is an epidemic on our hands.
Yeppir. CT says goodbye to your rights if they suspect Ebola: http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-1...uspended-indef
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CDC says forced quarantine? Really? NOW? Kinda late to the party... http://news.yahoo.com/cdc-could-quar...230534518.html
Let's bump this thread with some more news.
I don't think hide and watch will be enough before this is over.
http://www.cnn.com/2014/10/12/health/ebola/index.html
Yup, we've got this under control. Once again we see Ebola is impossible to catch. Guess our advanced healthcare techniques and prevention/isolation procedures aren't enough to stop the spread. Hopefully the nurse was being monitored and was isolated quickly.
It obvious healthcare workers have a high risk because they have the highest chance of contact with infected persons. But healthcare workers also have the best personal protection procedures. And those are seeming to have a high failure rate.
Right now Citizens don't have as high chance of contacting infected persons as healthcare workers, but I'd argue citizens are even more at risk because they aren't going to be using any personal protection procedures if they happen to contact an infected person. So what happens when more infections turn up outside the healthcare setting? If the virus is spreading inside the healthcare setting, you can bet it will spread much faster outside in the population.
From the CNN article:
That should read:Quote:
Ebola is actually very difficult to catch. People are at risk if they come into very close contact with the blood, saliva, sweat, feces, semen, vomit or soiled clothing of an Ebola patient, or if they travel to affected areas in West Africa and come into contact with someone who has Ebola.
Quote:
Ebola is actually very difficult to catch. People are at risk if they come into very close contact with the blood, saliva, sweat, feces, semen, vomit or soiled clothing of an Ebola patient, or if they travel to affected areas in West Africa and come into contact with someone who has Ebola, even while wearing full protective gear and following "safety" protocols.
The other thing is the CDC is now saying "contact" with an infected person may happen within 3 feet - not necessarily direct contact. So much for having their story straight.
Every case resets the timer to 21 days, if we can get to say 35 days without a case we'll have turned a corner.