Ebola Outbreak

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@ chemgal, Clearly, well-prepared. American idiots and their 'disease system'...I'm not sure on what basis they feel compelled to 'help' or 'advise' any country in Africa when this is how their infectious disease response protocol works.
 
The problem as I'm hearing it is that, as always seems to happen, the government is promising a lot but failing to deliver. That's why the private foundations matter so much. They are much more likely to actually deliver on their pledges. If the public wants a better government response, then they need to let the government know that. Letter writing or something. There's an election in a year and if the government thinks that contributing to the Ebola fight will help with that, they'll make sure it happens.

This may be controversial to say on WC, but it is conceivable that a world where development policy is dominated by Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg may not entirely be a bad thing. People like that are all about getting things done, not dithering over the optics and political narratives. If you've read any of Bill's writing on development and disease in Africa, he gets it in a way that no Western government does and that's why his foundation is now so influential in things like fighting malaria and AIDS in Africa.

They need people on the ground - medical first responders, supplies and equipment, now. And continuously until it is contained and lessened. Development plans need to be worked on but there's immediate need now and they can't dither.
 
Right, and I'm suggesting that it's the governments that are dithering and the private foundations that aren't. If Paul Allen's money can hire the necessary people and provide the necessary resources, then the government can go eff themselves. There's a reason why people make jokes about government inefficiency - because governments are often inefficient, esp. highly bureaucratized and politicized ones like ours.
 
They need people on the ground - medical first responders, supplies and equipment, now. And continuously until it is contained and lessened. Development plans need to be worked on but there's immediate need now and they can't dither.
They needed it back in Feb. In the heavily affected areas, it's mostly a wait it out game while preventing the spread to new areas.
 
Has anyone heard a survival story that's either first hand or involves quite a few quotes from someone who isn't Christian?
 
Yes, the current Ebola outbreak is nearly over. In retrospect, things could have been handled better, and probably will, at the next outbreak which, we hope, will never happen. On the whole, international co-operation and willingness to quell the outbreak was admirable. There is hope for humanity!
 
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