Institute for Public Accuracy
980 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * ipa@accuracy.org
_______________________________________________
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Ebola: Are We Being Told the Truth?
980 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * ipa@accuracy.org
_______________________________________________
Wednesday, October 8, 2014
Ebola: Are We Being Told the Truth?
CNN
reports: "Thomas Eric Duncan, a man with Ebola who traveled to the
United States from Liberia, died Wednesday morning at Texas
Health Presbyterian Hospital in Dallas, the hospital said." Reuters reports at least 3,439 people have died in the current outbreak.
Nass writes at the Anthrax Vaccine blog.
Her recent pieces include:
"Drilling Down Into the Facts Regarding Airborne Spread of Ebola" and
"U.S. Ebola: [United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
head] Frieden Said Every Hospital Was Ready. He is Wrong."
Nass said today: "Thomas Eric Duncan died in spite receiving the
highest level of intensive care, including dialysis and ventilation. The
CDC and much of the media have been
saying that you can only get Ebola through direct contact with body
fluids -- and at the same time they've been backing the use
extraordinary measures to prevent transmission. The fact is, there's no
doubt that Ebola has a history of airborne droplet transmission
and pundits are beginning to admit it. When only one to ten live viral
particles are needed to cause an infection you are looking at airborne
droplet and fomite transmission as viable routes of spread, and
healthcare facilities being a locus of spread. See
from the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy: "Health workers need optimal respiratory protection
for Ebola."
"The USAMRIID [United States Army Medical Research Institute of
Infectious Diseases, based at Fort Detrick, Maryland] and Tulane
University had a unit physically located near
where the Ebola outbreak began. This unit's job was to test blood for
Lassa antibodies; they were also testing for Ebola as part of their
work.
"So USAMRIID had a bird's eye view into the Ebola epidemic from the
start. Maybe WHO [World Health Organization] and CDC were too
bureaucratically hamstrung to understand the implications of a big Ebola
outbreak, but USAMRIID, our premier biodefense center,
has no excuse that it did not understand what was happening. The military now says that they proved that Ebola had been in the area for
at least eight years and a whopping 9 percent of samples tested positive for Ebola. Why wasn't this noticed?"
Nass notes the Boston Globe is reporting: "BU biolab nears OK
amid hopes for tackling Ebola, safety concerns." But earlier this summer, she points out that there was reporting on widespread escapes at such labs. See: USA Today report in August: "Hundreds
of bioterror lab mishaps cloaked in secrecy." Nass states: "It
would be a mistake to license another high containment lab in the middle
of Boston when existing labs have a terrible track record of containing
the very organisms they are charged with studying."
FRANCIS BOYLE, fboyle@illinois.edu
Professor at the University of Illinois College of Law, Boyle
drafted the U.S. Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989, which is
the U.S. domestic implementing legislation for the Biological Weapons
Convention. His books include Biowarfare and
Terrorism.
He said today: “Different United States government agencies have a
long history of doing allegedly defensive biological warfare research at
labs in Liberia and Sierra Leone. This includes the CDC, which is now
the point agency for managing the Ebola spill-over
into the United States. Why is the Obama administration dispatching the
elite 101st Airborne Division to Liberia when they have no medical
training to provide medical treatment to dying Africans? How did
Zaire/Ebola get to West Africa from about 3,500 kilometers
away from where it was first identified in 1976?
“Why is the CDC not better prepared for this emergency after the
United States government has spent somewhere in the area of $70 billion
dollars after the October 2001 anthrax attacks to prepare for this exact
contingency? It is clear that those anthrax
attacks originated from United States government sources.”
The New York Times reported in 2010:
"More than eight years after anthrax-laced letters killed five people
and terrorized the country, the F.B.I.
on Friday closed its investigation, adding eerie new details to its
case that the 2001 attacks were carried out by Bruce E. Ivins, an Army
biodefense expert who killed himself in 2008."
For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167
For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167
francis a. boyle