Author Topic: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear  (Read 24731 times)

Shockwave

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #225 on: October 15, 2014, 01:56:06 PM »
turns out the nurse is 29.   she knew she was exposed and banning form flying.

after her temp rose to 99.3, she hopped a plane to cleveland anyway.   Prosecute her if she survives.  If I'm on that plane, and this idiot KNOWS she's been exposed, KNOWS the risks, KNOWS the CDC quarantine rules, and KNOWS her temp is rising, and she gets on the plane anyway?   That's akin to just unleashing a virus on others in times square.  lock her up.
charge her with 1 count attemtped murder of each passenger on both planes, then execute her.

Set a precedent.

Possible ebolians will quickly stop getting on planes.

MikMaq

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #226 on: October 15, 2014, 02:22:48 PM »
charge her with 1 count attemtped murder of each passenger on both planes, then execute her.

Set a precedent.

Possible ebolians will quickly stop getting on planes.
Just talked to me mom, apparently our gov, is basically making agreements demands with nurses unions.

Once your a risk you loose all rights as a worker, if you refuse to help a patience your out of the nurses union.

DroppingPlates

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #227 on: October 15, 2014, 02:39:09 PM »

Only 1 percent of Americas land mass is densly populated. Take a long drive sometime and you will see itto be true.

Note taken, but not every Getbigger lives in the US.

Parker

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #228 on: October 15, 2014, 02:40:11 PM »
Don't be shifty.  Come right out and say it.  You want that forty acres and a mule.
Already have it  ;)
Besides, most people wouldn't know what to do with it.

Parker

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #229 on: October 15, 2014, 02:44:35 PM »

Only 1 percent of Americas land mass is densly populated. Take a long drive sometime and you will see itto be true.
Exactly, sometimes just 1-2 hours outside of a some of our biggest metro areas is nothing but wood lands.
 And then let's not forget other continents. And then underwater or even on the water---one could have an actually floating city.

If the Incas could build cities in mountain ranges, then it's we can as well.

Archer77

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #230 on: October 15, 2014, 02:52:03 PM »
Already have it  ;)
Besides, most people wouldn't know what to do with it.

You deserve at least another 40, buddy.
A

Parker

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #231 on: October 15, 2014, 02:56:26 PM »
You deserve at least another 40, buddy.
Ha...
Thanks, I hope to obey The Corn Laws...Getbig style Corn, of course.

orion

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #232 on: October 15, 2014, 04:12:09 PM »
turns out the nurse is 29.   she knew she was exposed and banning form flying.

after her temp rose to 99.3, she hopped a plane to cleveland anyway.   Prosecute her if she survives.  If I'm on that plane, and this idiot KNOWS she's been exposed, KNOWS the risks, KNOWS the CDC quarantine rules, and KNOWS her temp is rising, and she gets on the plane anyway?   That's akin to just unleashing a virus on others in times square.  lock her up.

Actually you are wrong.  She called the CDC and they told her no worries until you are under 100.4.  Obviously had something very important to do in Cleveland.

Shockwave

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #233 on: October 15, 2014, 04:56:39 PM »
Actually you are wrong.  She called the CDC and they told her no worries until you are under 100.4.  Obviously had something very important to do in Cleveland.
she had a booty call to get to. Poor bastard

Primemuscle

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #234 on: October 15, 2014, 05:11:04 PM »
Just talked to me mom, apparently our gov, is basically making agreements demands with nurses unions.

Once your a risk you loose all rights as a worker, if you refuse to help a patience your out of the nurses union.

What do you mean by once you're a risk?

Lustral

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #235 on: October 15, 2014, 05:14:16 PM »
turns out the nurse is 29.   she knew she was exposed and banning form flying.

after her temp rose to 99.3, she hopped a plane to cleveland anyway.   Prosecute her if she survives.  If I'm on that plane, and this idiot KNOWS she's been exposed, KNOWS the risks, KNOWS the CDC quarantine rules, and KNOWS her temp is rising, and she gets on the plane anyway?   That's akin to just unleashing a virus on others in times square.  lock her up.

Gtr. Same as guy who brought it to usa. Lying girl. Should piss on his grave.

orion

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #236 on: October 15, 2014, 05:16:49 PM »
Can anyone tell me why they aren't working on a plan to drop this virus into ISIS territory?  All I see is win win win!

Archer77

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #237 on: October 15, 2014, 05:17:33 PM »
It occurred to me that with black people spreading eboLA around the odds are anabolic will be getbigs first casualty.
A

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #238 on: October 15, 2014, 05:18:41 PM »
charge her with 1 count attemtped murder of each passenger on both planes, then execute her.

Set a precedent.

Possible ebolians will quickly stop getting on planes.

Love it!

tommywishbone

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #239 on: October 15, 2014, 05:27:29 PM »
Ebola rhymes with...

RC Cola
Ayatollah of Rock n' Rolla
a

DroppingPlates

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #240 on: October 16, 2014, 02:19:14 AM »
Ebola rhymes with...

RC Cola
Ayatollah of Rock n' Rolla


Cola almost kills anything, maybe ebola as well..

Shockwave

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #241 on: October 16, 2014, 02:37:39 AM »
Quote from: tommywishbone link=topic=552809.msg7768523#msg7768523

Ayatollah of Rock n' Rolla

[/quote
heartbreak ridge.

Nice.

Clints the man.

Super Natural

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #242 on: October 16, 2014, 03:33:08 AM »
is this shit airborne yet? or it still only by contact  ???

Misdirected or not..I saw an news interviw with Liberians aid workers saying they cleared  around clinics hospitals & houses as the believed/claimed ebola was so infectious it was being passed on by patients having made contact with the grass, scary shit!  :o

Necrosis

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #243 on: October 16, 2014, 03:44:31 AM »
Misdirected or not..I saw an news interviw with Liberians aid workers saying they cleared  around clinics hospitals & houses as the believed/claimed ebola was so infectious it was being passed on by patients having made contact with the grass, scary shit!  :o

Probably because they shit and piss and puke on the ground like it's a toilet. Ever seen images of West Point and monrovia? they literally shit on the ground it's fuked

El Diablo Blanco

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #244 on: October 16, 2014, 07:19:40 AM »


Farming in the city
805 million: The number of people who suffer from chronic hunger. While this number is down about 11% over the last decade, it still represents an unacceptable proportion of the world's population.
 
10.95 billion: How many people the United Nations thinks the world is going to have to support by the year 2100. This represents a significant upward revision from previous estimates that had pegged the human population as leveling off around 2050 at about 9.5 billion. Much of this new growth is occurring in sub-Saharan Africa, where family size remains high and mortality from HIV is down.
 
33: The percentage of the world's food that is wasted before it is consumed by a human being. In the Global South, this waste occurs thanks to inefficient processing and storage facilities. In the Global North, consumers and retailers are to blame. The United Nations estimates that global food waste costs $2.6 trillion annually.
 



2.512 billion: How many tons of food the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization expects the world's farmers to harvest this year. If this projection comes true, we will be within .50% of the world's most bountiful year on record.
 
2,868: The number of dietary calories available on our planet per person per day in 2011, the last year for which data is available. This number has actually been growing, suggesting that the amount of food produced per person has been steadily rising (in 1990 there were 2,619 dietary calories per person per day). This growth in productivity is especially remarkable considering that the Earth's population grew by about 2 billion people over this time. Most importantly, the number of calories per person per day tells us that there is enough food on the planet for us all.
 
Of course, the first two numbers paint a sobering picture of the potential food security and sustainability challenges the world faces. And when we add in the uncertainties over climate change, then the task of planning and effectively implementing systems and policies that will ensure everyone in the future receives an adequate diet seems a daunting one.
 
But the other figures tell a different story, and allow room for some optimism.
 
Why? Because fundamentally, the data show us that we have enough food. We are not up against some irrefutable Malthusian monster. What's more, these numbers prove that hunger is a matter of public policy and everyday behavior and suggest that social collapse, widespread famine and destitution should never be seen as inevitable in a world that wastes one-third of its food.
 
Ultimately, these five numbers tell us that hunger is a solvable problem. Yes, famines, droughts and food riots will be an increasing feature of the headlines in the decades ahead. But this should not distract from the underlying: The world can have a well-fed future, one where everyone has enough to eat.

Shockwave

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #245 on: October 16, 2014, 07:36:54 AM »

Farming in the city
805 million: The number of people who suffer from chronic hunger. While this number is down about 11% over the last decade, it still represents an unacceptable proportion of the world's population.
 
10.95 billion: How many people the United Nations thinks the world is going to have to support by the year 2100. This represents a significant upward revision from previous estimates that had pegged the human population as leveling off around 2050 at about 9.5 billion. Much of this new growth is occurring in sub-Saharan Africa, where family size remains high and mortality from HIV is down.
 
33: The percentage of the world's food that is wasted before it is consumed by a human being. In the Global South, this waste occurs thanks to inefficient processing and storage facilities. In the Global North, consumers and retailers are to blame. The United Nations estimates that global food waste costs $2.6 trillion annually.
 



2.512 billion: How many tons of food the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization expects the world's farmers to harvest this year. If this projection comes true, we will be within .50% of the world's most bountiful year on record.
 
2,868: The number of dietary calories available on our planet per person per day in 2011, the last year for which data is available. This number has actually been growing, suggesting that the amount of food produced per person has been steadily rising (in 1990 there were 2,619 dietary calories per person per day). This growth in productivity is especially remarkable considering that the Earth's population grew by about 2 billion people over this time. Most importantly, the number of calories per person per day tells us that there is enough food on the planet for us all.
 
Of course, the first two numbers paint a sobering picture of the potential food security and sustainability challenges the world faces. And when we add in the uncertainties over climate change, then the task of planning and effectively implementing systems and policies that will ensure everyone in the future receives an adequate diet seems a daunting one.
 
But the other figures tell a different story, and allow room for some optimism.
 
Why? Because fundamentally, the data show us that we have enough food. We are not up against some irrefutable Malthusian monster. What's more, these numbers prove that hunger is a matter of public policy and everyday behavior and suggest that social collapse, widespread famine and destitution should never be seen as inevitable in a world that wastes one-third of its food.
 
Ultimately, these five numbers tell us that hunger is a solvable problem. Yes, famines, droughts and food riots will be an increasing feature of the headlines in the decades ahead. But this should not distract from the underlying: The world can have a well-fed future, one where everyone has enough to eat.

lol, i remember bill gates and others saying how vaccines will slow/stop overpopulation because people like the Africans will have less childrn when their kids are not all dying.

I called bullshit and said that Africans, like muslims in europe, will just keeo breeding because it in their culture.

Seems gates was wrong, lol. Like 3rd worlders are suddenly going to stop ficking and start using BC because our vaccines are cauing their children to live. Now you just have more of them consuming stuff.

Archer77

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #246 on: October 16, 2014, 07:42:41 AM »
lol, i remember bill gates and others saying how vaccines will slow/stop overpopulation because people like the Africans will have less childrn when their kids are not all dying.

I called bullshit and said that Africans, like muslims in europe, will just keeo breeding because it in their culture.

Seems gates was wrong, lol. Like 3rd worlders are suddenly going to stop ficking and start using BC because our vaccines are cauing their children to live. Now you just have more of them consuming stuff.

Yes, they will continue to have as many children as they can.  I say, discontinue all medical and financial aid to Africa immediately. African aid is not a good investment.  We are creating an entire continent of Detroit. Most of the aid is stolen by bandits anyway. 
A

DroppingPlates

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #247 on: October 16, 2014, 08:33:43 AM »
Yes, they will continue to have as many children as they can.  I say, discontinue all medical and financial aid to Africa immediately. African aid is not a good investment.  We are creating an entire continent of Detroit. Most of the aid is stolen by bandits anyway. 

QFT and amen

_aj_

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #248 on: October 16, 2014, 09:06:46 AM »
lol, i remember bill gates and others saying how vaccines will slow/stop overpopulation because people like the Africans will have less childrn when their kids are not all dying.

I called bullshit and said that Africans, like muslims in europe, will just keeo breeding because it in their culture.

Seems gates was wrong, lol. Like 3rd worlders are suddenly going to stop ficking and start using BC because our vaccines are cauing their children to live. Now you just have more of them consuming stuff.

It's called the Demographic Transition is it is dogma for public health academics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_transition

I wonder though, if the DT ever really factored in a religion that really encouraged childbirth the way that Islam does. Certainly, even Catholicism in Europe has lost it's multi-child luster.

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Re: Ebola - in Texas - Two Cases, including a nurse that wore protective gear
« Reply #249 on: October 16, 2014, 09:56:14 AM »