We're Safe from Ebola Because We're Rich. How Is That Working Out So Far?

Categories: Schutze

dallas_immigrant_kids.jpg
Dallas Observer
This is the face of Dallas.

A major theme -- a very dangerous one -- in the reaction here to the arrival of Ebola is the notion that we are protected by our cultural and economic superiority from the kind of contagion now in Africa and that all we need to do is remain calm. I sincerely question whether calm is our most appropriate response right now.

Instead of mere calm we should maintain intense aggressive vigilance to the obvious vulnerabilities of our health care system, not to mention our culture. After all, that's how we got here.

Yesterday, Dallas Morning News editorial writer Tod Robberson started off the day with an assertion that American Ebola Victim Zero, Thomas Eric Duncan, probably brought about the current crisis through his own foreign stupidity, exploiting the political correctness of liberals at Presbyterian Hospital. Robberson tied the Ebola story to the invader at the White House, theorizing that both the White House and Presbyterian were breached because of the timidity of officials.

Under the headline, "The common link between Ebola and the White House breach," Robberson wrote: "In both cases, it appears, the people in charge erred on the side of caution and perhaps even a concern for political correctness in not taking more aggressive measures to ensure the greater priority of avoiding catastrophe."

Suggesting broadly that Duncan pulled a fast one on gullible hospital officials, Robberson said, "This traveler, if educated and American, almost certainly would have volunteered that crucial information."

Later in the day when it was learned Duncan's party did inform the hospital of his travels and the hospital did nothing, Robberson had to eat his words. But the danger I'm talking about is in that first shoot-from-the-hip reaction, with all its arrogance and xenophobia. Robberson is an editorial writer at the city's only daily newspaper. How emblematic is his thinking of the way others in the city may react? In addition to being stupid, his first-blush narrative misdirected attention that ought to have been focused on the hospital.

What is that full story? Has anyone considered the possibility that the hospital's decision to get rid of a patient from Liberia was not unintentional? We have a long-established issue in Dallas of patient dumping from emergency rooms. We should be urgently trying to determine which category Presbyterian's actions fell into in this case, the choices being stupidity, sloppiness and criminality.

Since the behavior of Presbyterian may predict the way other Dallas hospitals will react when they get their first walk-in Ebola patients, I don't think we should be all that calm about it until we know exactly what happened, in full.

It's not just Robberson. Some of the cultural chauvinism in the general response so far is almost laughable. Today's Dallas Morning News op-ed page includes an upbeat Ebola essay by an epidemiologist under the headline, "Good news on Ebola is its relatively slow spread." And God knows we need that upbeat side of the Ebola story.

In his essay the writer says, "But while the virus has not changed much in more than a decade, many parts of Africa are very different. People live in much denser quarters, and the population is also much more mobile than before. This increases opportunities for the virus to reach new areas where new chains of transmission can grow and become established."

Clearly the author has never visited the "Five Points" neighborhood of Dallas, where immigrants, many from Africa, live packed like sardines into crumbling apartment complexes built for swinging stewardesses in the 1980s. In the same newspaper with the upbeat essay about our economic superiority, another story reports that the five school children with whom Duncan came into contact, presumably while contagious, were occupants of the same apartment Duncan was living in. Five kids and uncounted other adults, in other words, were living in the same two-bedroom apartment in a tattered immigrant neighborhood in Dallas. How superior does that make us feel? How calm?

The New York Times today describes the scene in the neighborhood: "At an African cafe down the street from the apartment complex where Mr. Duncan had been staying with relatives and a middle school attended by one or two of the students being monitored, a group of Ethiopian men and women sat talking at a table outside. No one knew Mr. Duncan or his family, and one woman was unfamiliar with Ebola and its effects."

Just to make sure we all understand, the neighborhood is a jam-packed, poorly served, cheaply built outpost of Africa, Southeast Asia and other parts of the Third World. The Daily Mail and NBC News today offer these glimpses:

"One neighbor, Mesud Osmanovic, told NBC that Mr. Duncan was 'throwing up all over the place' outside the apartment block as he was helped into an ambulance while his hysterical family looked on.

"Residents pay $800 a month for a two-bedroom apartment.

"... a man in his 20s entered the family's apartment in North Dallas, holding what appeared to be a roll of black garbage bag, suggesting the family are disposing of items which may have been infected.

"Two women in their 20s also visited the apartment for a short while.

"The (isolation) orders were hand-delivered to the family members on Wednesday evening by local health officials."

The real lesson here is that all of our wealth and all of our vaunted procedures are worthless when they are defeated by our own arrogance and stupidity. Nothing against calm. Calm is a wonderful thing, especially because it feels so good. But we earn calm. I just don't think we're there yet.



Advertisement

My Voice Nation Help
138 comments
TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

Our front-line strategy to prevent ebola from taking root here is based on trust.

riconnel8
riconnel8

"It's not just Robberson. Some of the cultural chauvinism in the general response so far is almost laughable. Today's Dallas Morning News op-ed page includes an upbeat Ebola essay by an epidemiologist under the headline, "Good news on Ebola is its relatively slow spread." And God knows we need that upbeat side of the Ebola story."

I'm still trying to figure out why I like the last sentence so much.  It made me chuckle when I read it.  And God knows we need something to chuckle over.

andypandy
andypandy

Given that the onset of Ebola mimics every other viral infection I wonder how all the hysteria will pan out when flu season really starts going and we have more than a couple of Africans with accents running fevers? While our money and culture may not save us from every instance of Ebola I'm willing to bet the combination of lack of information and media driven fear will possibly lead to far greater problems in the US than the couple of cases we'll likely see.

Jrider503
Jrider503

lol.  So to summarize.  "Dallas is racist.  And you shouldn't be calm, but don't get so upset that you forget how racist you are."  

Anonamouse
Anonamouse

" The real lesson here is that all of our wealth and all of our vaunted procedures are worthless when they are defeated by our own arrogance and stupidity."

*sigh* /facepalm

No, the real lesson here is that all our vaunted institutionalized and forcibly imposed good intentions and political correctness and fear of people thinking poorly of us, to the point that we refuse to admit that the "face of Dallas" is what caused this problem in the first place, is defeated by reality - which is disease, poverty, and inability to communicate effectively (if at all) because you need to speak at least 4 different languages to order a hamburger these days, much less warn an apartment complex of foreigners about a health crisis.  

Schutze, our national obsession with "fairness" and "inclusivity", and "humility", begun under your generation's watch, is what brought Ebola to Dallas. It's merely another waypoint on the road to the destruction of our society. Hopefully neither you nor I will live long enough to witness the final act, but thankfully I don't have children to worry about.

As an aside, I urge everyone to breathe deeply for five seconds before leaping for the "reply" button to call me racist so you can type coherently. Typos in ad hominem attacks are such a bore...

And one more thing - I hope publicity whore Clay Jenkins spends a loooooong time with the poor, afflicted man and the others in isolation. I'm surprised he didn't injure the CDC and Presby spokesmen trying to get to the cameras to show his highly-polished mannequin face.

Myrna.Minkoff-Katz
Myrna.Minkoff-Katz topcommenter

A teenager was taken into custody Thursday afternoon after posting an image that indicated Ebola had been discovered in Frisco ISD.

Police said he faces charges for creating a false alarm or report as it promoted numerous students to stay home from school and caused concern among parents.

“This incident caused an unjustified fear within our community and within the Frisco Independent School District,” Lt. Jason Jenkins said.---DMN

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

Wonder when North Texas cities will start aerial and ground spraying to control the ebola transmission vectors?  what does one spray to eliminate or reduce the number of poor people in an area?  Money?

raymondmcrawford
raymondmcrawford

Wonder what District 10 Dallas city council member Jerry Allen has to say about his district being 'ground zero" for the US Ebola outbreak?

ScottsMerkin
ScottsMerkin topcommenter

Shouldn't we be more worried about the Entovirus that had just reached DFW but has affected thousands across the US?  That shit is much more likely to affect our daily life 

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@riconnel8

Joey Da Mouf Who Would Be President messes with the narrative via Twitter:

"In a globalized world, threats as diverse as terrorism and pandemic disease cross borders at blinding speeds." -VP Biden

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@bvckvs

We pray for your students.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@JimSX

CNN website says the family is quarantined with patient zero's sweat-soaked sheets, and for some weird reason, the family wants to leave the infected apartment.

JimSX
JimSX topcommenter

@Anonamouse

Airplanes. Telephones. Internet. Media. Mass marketing. Globalization. Are these what you mean by "political correctness?" 

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@Anonamouse 

Schutze, our national obsession with "fairness" and "inclusivity", and "humility", begun under your generation's watch, is what brought Ebola to Dallas.

so until the "Schutze....generation's watch" there were not any international travellers, and there were not any diseases transported across the world by them?

that's, uh, an interesting but inaccurate assessment.

what did "fairness", "inclusivity" and "humility" contribute to have this individual arrive here in Dallas?

(and interesting that you say "ad hominem attacks are such a bore" and then launch one such attack on Jenkins. just saying...)

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps topcommenter

@RTGolden1 That's guesty's theory.


The problem is that for every $100 we throw on the ground we have to throw $50 in JWP's pocket.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@riconnel8

I can't imagine why.

Anonamouse
Anonamouse

@JimSX No, I mean the lemming-like insistence that we allow anyone and everyone into our country. We have the most lax immigration laws of any first-world country, and yet thousands (millions) of others flout them with little fear of repercussion. It's far too late to change things, of course, because now we can't prevent "visitors" from coming to visit others who are already here, and any suggestion that we do so leads to accusations that we want to "split up" families, or "harm the children", not to mention the not-so-subtle (if not openly voiced) accusations of racism when someone suggest we do. We can't stand up to being called racists, after all - it's the trump card. Hell, we're on the verge of granting blanket citizenship to millions of people just because they happen to be on the "right" side of the border, with no other considerations (aside from platitudes to placate the voting masses, which will never be implemented - racist, doncha know).

Jim, I respect you immensely, and I think I understand your views in many instances, but when it comes to the implication that "we" feel we're immune to Ebola (or any other ill foisted upon us as a result of lax immigration) because we're rich, I think that you mean the "elite", those in positions of authority/power who make those decisions. Speaking for myself, not only do I not feel immune, I feel at risk, and I'd venture that I'm not alone in that regard. Ebola, and any of a host of other diseases, doesn't care about your bank balance, or how you voted in the last primary.

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

@mavdog "...typos in ad hominem attacks are such a bore..."  changes the meaning entirely from what you tried to project.  Shame on you Mav, you're much better than that.

Anonamouse
Anonamouse

@mavdog The problems listed have accelerated in recent years due to, at best, indifference to the influx of foreign nationals. Some may say it's intentional (I'm not one) but there is clearly no desire to slow, much less stop, the flow. It's too late, at any rate. You failed to mention any of the points in the paragraph prior, so I assume you either agree with me or wanted to omit it to better reinforce your point of view. Fair enough.

As to my attack on Jenkins, I followed my own request, and it is typo-free. If you find it boring, so be it, but I just couldn't believe he got some waxy face-time in this whole debacle. I had no idea he was such a huge part of Dallas County's infectious disease control team.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@bvckvs

You've been mocking the "panic" since day zero, now an errant Twitter joke is grounds for a terrorism charge?

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@Anonamouse

I don't see you answer the question of what "fairness", "inclusivity" and "humility" contribute to have this individual arriving here in Dallas?

You failed to mention any of the points in the paragraph prior

you mean the real lesson here is that all our vaunted institutionalized and forcibly imposed good intentions and political correctness and fear of people thinking poorly of us, to the point that we refuse to admit that the "face of Dallas" is what caused this problem in the first place, is defeated by reality - which is disease, poverty, and inability to communicate effectively (if at all) because you need to speak at least 4 different languages to order a hamburger these days, much less warn an apartment complex of foreigners about a health crisis. 

I just thought it was a rant, and a very, very long run on sentence. Don't see how any of our "poverty" and "inability to communicate properly" (do you know Liberians speak english?) precipitated the visit to Dallas of a Liberian who is infected with Ebola. 

and I order burgers all the time in one language, english. haven't had a problem.

I admit failure to read that you were pointing to typos, rather than the ad hominem attacks themselves, as being "a bore". I disagree, it is the attacks that are a bore.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@TPFKAP

if you plan on traveling to the wilds of the world, you get lots of shots (ask any Marine).

When the wilds of the world come to visit and you haven't had the shots, shit happens.

But, if Nigeria can beat it, we can. In fact, I just got an email from a Prince there stressing that very point, and I'm in - you should be too, if you have that kind of scratch.

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@ScottsMerkin

and there aren't any children who are "paralyzed and in the ER" caused by enterovirus 68 either.

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@doublecheese

no, there is not any paralysis (such as polio induced) that has been shown to be linked to entereovirus 68.

there have been some children who have exhibited muscle weakness, and some of those kids have entereovirus 68 infection, but those same kids have other afflictions.

don't rush to judgement....

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

@mavdog @everlastingphelps http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/751032_6

Like so much that you two argue about, the correct answer is "WE DON'T REALLY FRIGGIN KNOW!".  Some of the points each of you make are true, other points are speculation.  The medical field (not Mother Jones, who I'm sure would prescribe chicken soup) associates enterovirus strains with neurologic disorders and other afflictions, including meningitis.  HEV68, as recently as 2010, has been almost exclusively associated with respiratory infections, but could be an agent in over 100 different infections and conditions.

In other words, We. Don't. Know.

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps topcommenter

@mavdog @ScottsMerkin and there aren't any children who are "paralyzed and in the ER" caused by enterovirus 68 either.


There's a huge (unsupported) leap in logic from "we haven't found EV68 in the spinal fluid of the paralyzed patients yet" to "EV68 isn't causing the paralysis."

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@RTGolden1 

drink some chicken soup. it couldn't hurt....

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@everlastingphelps 

There's a huge (unsupported) leap in logic from "we haven't found EV68 in the spinal fluid of the paralyzed patients yet" to "EV68 isn't causing the paralysis."

not any more of a "leap" than calling enterovirus 68 "polio II".

thousands of people have become infected from enterovirus 68, and none of them have been "paralyzed".

Mervis
Mervis

@mavdog I give you credit for debating with Phelps but don't you just end up banging your head against the wall at the end of the day out of frustration? Whew.

everlastingphelps
everlastingphelps topcommenter

@mavdog @everlastingphelps not any more of a "leap" than calling enterovirus 68 "polio II".

thousands of people have become infected from enterovirus 68, and none of them have been "paralyzed".


You are aware that the paralysis rate for the original Polio was around 1%, right?  And that 95% of people infected with polio never show any symptoms?

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

Call him a cunt, it gets people furious.

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@everlastingphelps 

odd that you call it "intentionally stupid" when all I am doing is showing your claims to be weak if not irrational.

guess it is a case of understanding the source...

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@everlastingphelps 

if all you see from the facts laid out in my posts and corrections of your errors as "nay-saying", you have a problem with reading comprehension.

Now Trending

Dallas Concert Tickets

From the Vault

 

General

Loading...