Obama will give it preferred immigration status, as long as it votes RAT.
The rider on the Pale Horse comes.
Anyone who fears ebola is racist. Quit hatin’ all the time.
If it breaks out in the US, it should be renamed “O-bola” in honor of our first black prez. It might be his most lasting legacy, and the “never let a good crisis go to waste” opportunity he really, really needs to get people to beg the gubmint to “...do something! Anything! Take away all our rights! Please, just save of from the O-bola bleedout!”
LOL. The press demonising oh-those-poor-migrants is as fictional as the story's characters.
Reminds me of Rise of the Planet of the Apes, where 2/3 of all humans on Earth die from an ape virus.
The worst thing to do is bring the ill here for treatment. The disease is so virulent you MUST contain it or face the worst health disaster in American history.
I highly recommend reading the entire article.
FrontPageAfrica has now learned that upon being told he had Ebola, Mr. Sawyer went into a rage, denying and objecting to the opinion of the medical experts. He was so adamant and difficult that he took the tubes from his body and took off his pants and urinated on the health workers, forcing them to flee.
Looking to get to the bottom of Sawyers strange ailment on the Asky Airline flight, which Sawyer transferred on in Togo, hospital officials say, he was tested for both malaria and HIV AIDS. However, when both tests came back negative, he was then asked whether he had made contact with any person with the Ebola Virus, to which Sawyer denied. Sawyers sister, Princess had died of the deadly virus on Monday, July 7, 2014 at the Catholic Hospital in Monrovia. On Friday, July 25, 2014, 18 days later, Sawyer died in Lagos.
The Center for Disease Control (CDC) recommends that the average incubation period for suspected cases or someone who has made contact with an Ebola patient is eight to ten days from exposure to onset of symptoms. The range is from two to 21 days. That’s why we recommend that contacts of an infected person go on a fever watch for 21 days, says Stephan Monroe, deputy director of CDC’s National Center for Emerging Zoonotic and Infectious Diseases, at a briefing Monday.