Posted on 10/13/2014 8:45:18 PM PDT by grundle
As the Obama administration and the United Nations send military troops and massive amounts of resources in a thus far totally ineffective bid to supposedly combat the deadly Ebola virus, one private company has already stopped Ebola in its tracks with exactly zero soldiers, according to National Public Radio. Indeed, using standard medical techniques to control the disease that it found through Google searches, Firestone Natural Rubber Company, which operates a giant rubber-tree farm in Ebola-stricken Liberia, has become what the Wall Street Journal described as a sanctuary of health in a country where cases are doubling every three weeks.
As of last week, there were no more known Ebola infections on the 185-square-mile farm among the companys 8,500 employees and their 71,500 dependents, according to news reports. Meanwhile, all around Firestones rubber plantation, despite a massive government effort that has included the use of troops to quarantine whole towns at gunpoint, the deadly disease continues to wreak havoc. There are villages here that are getting wiped out, explained Ed Garcia, the Philippines-born director of Firestones Ebola-free tree farm. Nearby Liberians quoted in news reports complained that they were not allowed into the farm.
Speaking to the Journal, Garcia explained how Firestone succeeded where governments and the UN continue to fail. When the first Ebola patient arrived at the rubber plantation, farm managers searched for Ebola online. Armed with information, they set up an Ebola War Room to strategize. It was like flying an airplane and reading the manual at the same time, Garcia told the Journals reporter in Liberia. Speaking to NPR, he added: None of us had any Ebola experience. Soon, though, they were ready to combat the virus.
First they built isolation clinics using shipping containers and plastic wrap. Company trucks were turned into makeshift ambulances. Protective suits used to clean up chemical spills became medical gear to protect those who may be exposed to an infected patient. Meanwhile, company janitors were trained in how to properly bury the bodies of Ebola victims, company police were deployed to enforce a no visitors rule, and teachers at the companys schools visited each home to teach farm workers and their families about the disease something especially crucial as rumors about Ebola continue to spread like wildfire among the population.
Unlike the Liberian governments measures coordinated with the controversial World Health Organization Firestones plan worked. The head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) team in Liberia, Dr. Brendan Flannery, praised Firestones efforts to combat Ebola as resourceful, innovative and effective, NPR reported. When asked what was needed to turn the tide, Flannery responded: More Firestones. Instead, in a widely criticized move that was not authorized by Congress, Obama is sending thousands of U.S. troops to the area.
Of course, Ebola could resurface on the rubber farm, or, more likely, it could be reintroduced by an outsider. But for now, there are no more known cases, according to the Journal. In a separate article, NPR cited three remaining patients, all of whom came from the outside but were treated using the companys resources. If the disease strikes again, Firestone is ready for it, giving employees and their relatives confidence and security that outbreaks will be dealt with appropriately.
At the same time, Liberians not fortunate enough to work for Firestone are trying to get in to the farm, with some complaining that the company has turned away ambulances and potentially sick patients. We are surrounded by hot spots, Garcia explained. And theyre crossing into our farm. The Journal reported that the farm recently accepted a family of 16 at the companys hospital, with some of them being quarantined.
While managers want to help, they are struggling with tough decisions about whether to take in outsiders, and how many to admit especially to avoid overwhelming their own preparations and resources. The schools, closed by government order, have been transformed into quarantine centers. The only new reported cases on the farm since March were people who came in from the outside, according to NPR.
By all accounts, Firestones huge farm apparently the largest contiguous rubber-tree farm on Earth is a paradise compared with the destitution and havoc across the rest of war-torn Liberia. In a country where children walk to school over muddy paths, high-school students here board big yellow school buses, winding over country roads, the Journal reported. Electricity flows from a private dam. Water towers, telephone poles, speed-limit signs and brick homes all exceedingly rare in tropical Africa stare out over mowed hillsides that resemble the landscape outside Nashville, Tenn., where Firestones head office is based.
While the company has met with success so far, the far more costly and totalitarian schemes being pursued by the Obama administration, African governments, and the UN appear to be failing miserably. Across the rest of Liberia and West Africa, for example, the number of Ebola cases is reportedly doubling every three weeks. Estimates suggest well over 3,500 people have already died from the virus probably far more as many die in remote and isolated villages. And many more Africans will undoubtedly succumb to the diseases before it is all over, with some experts suggesting that millions could eventually perish from it.
Even in the Western world, Ebola is spreading, with patient zero, a Liberian, dying at a hospital in Dallas this week amid furious criticism aimed at President Obola. Surveys suggest Americans want authorities to stop flights from Ebola-stricken nations while the epidemic rages. Lawmakers in both parties have joined the push, blasting the UN WHO as an organization of unelected bureaucrats and political appointees of foreign countries that has no duty to protect the lives and well-being of Americans. Some 200 airline workers, meanwhile, walked off the job in New York to protest. Doctors are increasingly speaking out as well.
The Obama administration, however, has resisted those calls, even as illegal immigrants continue pouring across the southern border at least some of them from Ebola-stricken nations such as Liberia, Sierra Leone, and Guinea. Instead, the federal government has vowed to take some passengers temperatures to supposedly prevent the further spread of the disease.
New cases of Ebola are also being discovered across Europe, including a Spanish nurse who became the first known person to have contracted the disease outside of Africa. The UNs WHO, which recently selected the communist dictatorship ruling Cuba to lead its decision-making body, warned that more cases across the European continent were quite unavoidable in light of the extensive travel between Europe and the affected nations.
As The New American has reported previously, critics are concerned over the potentially tyrannical measures the Obama administration and the WHO have said they are prepared to take. Especially troubling to many doctors and experts is the fact that U.S. borders essentially remain wide open even as Washington, D.C., purports to possess wild powers on everything from quarantining healthy people with no symptoms to locking down entire cities and enforcing coercive treatment such as forced vaccination. A vaccine for Ebola is reportedly being developed.
Government officials on both sides of the Atlantic have urged the public to remain calm, saying the likelihood of a full-blown outbreak in the United States or Europe remains small. Authorities have also said they know how to stop the virus and prevent it from spreading. Still, public fears continue to grow about the potential spread of Ebola outside of Africa. And considering governments track records when it comes to honesty, caution is always wise.
THIS is the money quote, folks:
“company police were deployed to enforce a no visitors rule”
They cut themselves off from the outside, until they got the virus under control.
HELLO OBAMA/DEMOCRATS...
ARE YOU LISTENING???
I guess that’s where the rubber meets the road
No they are not. They nerver will.
When the rubber hits the road, I guess Firestone is ready!!!
The dreaded private sector hits a home run again.
.
No of course not. Big, oppressive, expensive, and ill-conceived “solutions” are their thing. Simple, cheap, and effective private approaches will not even be considered.
Those filthy, mean capitalist taking advantage of those poor workers and their families for blood money.... wait... you mean they didn’t?
It's called the benefits of WESTERN CIVILIZATION, for any liberal pukes who might be listening in.
need to get this information to the golf course where it might be seen
You mean the horrors brought by Columbus and the colonialists who followed!?
I have it on good authority that bombing of AA batteries in Vietnam was denied because they existed on American owned rubber plantations. What a difference forty years makes.
“need to get this information to the golf course where it might be seen...”
I think what would be most useful to everyone is for Firestone to publish a detailed “Current Best Approach” as used by Firestone to combat Ebola. Hopefully, legions will copy the procedure and we can put this bad actor in the outbox.
Somebody send this to O’Really.
Bump
I sent this on to others. Thank-you so much. Free market capitalism is compassionate and smart. Firestone, I’m looking at you for my next set of white walls.
Let’s try and get this to the attention of the left wing stenographers.
I don’t know.. To the liberal mindset, an evil exploitive American company is holding employees and their families hostage... Or using their privileged state to forbid suffering natives access to treatment...
The black exploiters would say that the pets of the white man while those who reject economic slavery die for their freedom.
Sanity is becoming an endangered resource. Good on Firestone.
A link to this thread has been posted on the Ebola Surveillance Thread
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