Topic: African Orphans. US should offer to take them in
no photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:02 PM
Edited by fleta_n_mach on Tue 10/07/14 03:04 PM
yup, that site is crooked advertising, also hooked into aol.com.

You have to copy paste that addy into your address location bar.

www.google.com/?gws_rd=ssl#q=Spanky+Simian+%2B+Bill+Sardi

mrld_ii's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:16 PM
Edited by mrld_ii on Tue 10/07/14 03:19 PM


I'm not advocating bringing in the sick.

Illegals aren't checked for diseases. They bring in TB and all sorts of rare, communicable diseases.



Impacts of Illegal Immigration: Diseases

Legal immigrants are required to have medical screening to ensure that they do not bring any contagious diseases into the United States. Illegal aliens are not screened and many are carrying horrific third world diseases that do not belong in the USA. Many of these diseases are highly contagious and will infect citizens that come in contact with an infected illegal alien. This has already happened in restaurants, schools, and police forces.

Malaria, Dengue, Leprosy, Hepatitis A-E, Chagas Disease (American Trypanosomiasis), HIV.

Then there is Schistosomiasis, Guinea Worm Infection, Whooping cough, Cysticercosis, Morgellon's, and a host of others.

"Recently an outbreak of hepatitis traced to Chi-Chi's Mexican restaurant, in Pennsylvania was inexplicably traced to contaminated green onions, not the most obvious cause, undocumented food workers who harbored Hepatitis. For the most part, Hepatitis is a blood-borne, not a food-borne disease. The Hepatitis outbreak infected over 650 individuals, caused 9,000 Americans to undergo immune globulin shots, and killed 4 people.

If Americans found out restaurants can commonly infect their customers from food workers, it would be a serious blow to the restaurant industry. Better blame the green onions. Let's concede the onions, grown in Mexico, were contaminated from fecal material containing Hepatitis. Did all the green onions imported from Mexico end up in one single restaurant? There were no other outbreaks of Hepatitis anywhere elsewhere from green onions. There were 13 restaurant workers who had Hepatitis. They were the likely source of the transmitted infection.

While the unions resist mandatory Hepatitis screening and vaccination for food workers, the government mandates that newborn babies be jabbed with Hepatitis vaccines before they can leave the hospital. The logic in this defies understanding until one realizes that newborn babies of immigrant families can more easily acquire Hepatitis so all babies are given the vaccines."

What's the scare about a few kids who get a thorough Medical screening before being emigrated?


Copyright And Fair Use Policy

Reproduction and Use

The author of this report grants the right to reproduce, copy, quote, transmit, or post on the internet any or all portions of this report as long as no contextual changes are made and such use is not sold or part of another
offering that is sold. Any significant use should attribute the report and author unless other use has been specifically granted.

Fair Use

In accordance with the provisions of Title 107 of the US Copyright Law, any copyrighted work used in this report is distributed under Fair Use provisions. The author is making any such material available as part of this report for educational purposes, in an effort to advance understanding of the impact of illegal immigration on the citizens and society of the United States. The author believes this constitutes a "fair use" of any such copyrighted material as provided for in Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107. If you wish to use any copyrighted material that may be in this report for purposes of your own that go beyond "fair use" you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

About The Author And Contact Information

P.F. Wagner is the original author of this report. All comments, corrections, additions, suggestions, reports of broken links, and presentation requests should be sent to this e-mail.

pfwagner@darksideofillegalimmigration.com


Guess you missed this part, OP? Or, has the author granted you specific exception FROM attributing the report and the author? Or, are you Bill Sardi? Or, P.F. Wagner, himself?



Again and still...poor forum form to take others' words and present them as your own.


no1phD's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:26 PM
Hmm... those children have small little hands.. tiny little fingers..
great for pulling the silver out of the cracks.. in my silver mines....

... how many can I take please....
... I mean how many can I .. lovingly adopt......

Ok.... I know poor taste.....
. and it is a very serious issue....
... for them... if I could scoop them all up.. and provide a happy home for them... I would..... but that's not very practical...... now I must go look up child labor laws... see how much I can get away with not paying them........
.. I'm kidding...

no photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:26 PM
I get kind of perturbed, when somebody breaks my links too.

Mary Burke running for Wisc Governor is a plagiarizer also. Think she'll win?

no photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:30 PM
The United States can no longer take all of the Huddled Masses yearning to be free.

mrld_ii's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:37 PM

I get kind of perturbed, when somebody breaks my links too...


what

I don't know why anybody would want to break links...or why anybody would have the ability to break links, but what the heck...


...they can go ahead and break Google, too, then.

All one has to do is type into Google search: "bill sardi des plaines patch illegal immigration" and the very first entry will be:

"Bringing back the diseases that..."


and the complete, cut-and-pasted text is right there, in front of EVERYbody's lying eyes.


Which OP already admitted he plagiarized when posting the "Fair Use" rules and overlooking the part where - if used - the source and author must be credited.


whoa





Conrad_73's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:40 PM
Edited by Conrad_73 on Tue 10/07/14 03:49 PM
seems they do quite well on their own!


Firestone Did What Governments Have Not: Stopped Ebola In Its Tracks

by Jason Beaubien


http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2014/10/06/354054915/firestone-did-what-governments-have-not-stopped-ebola-in-its-tracks?sc=tw

The classic slogan for Firestone tires was "where the rubber meets the road."

When it comes to Ebola, the rubber met the road at the Firestone rubber plantation in Harbel, Liberia.

Harbel is a company town not far from the capital city of Monrovia. It was named in 1926 after the founder of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Harvey and his wife, Idabelle. Today, Firestone workers and their families make up a community of 80,000 people across the plantation.

Firestone detected its first Ebola case on March 30, when an employee's wife arrived from northern Liberia. She'd been caring for a disease-stricken woman and was herself diagnosed with the disease. Since then Firestone has done a remarkable job of keeping the virus at bay. It built its own treatment center and set up a comprehensive response that's managed to quickly stop transmission. Dr. Brendan Flannery, the head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's team in Liberia, has hailed Firestone's efforts as resourceful, innovative and effective.

Currently the only Ebola cases on the sprawling, 185-square-mile plantation are in patients who come from neighboring towns.

Long rows of dappled rubber trees cover Harbel's landscape. Prevailing winds cause the adult trees to lean westward. Back when Firestone was still based in Ohio, employees used to joke that the trees are "bowing to Akron."

When the Ebola case was diagnosed, "we went in to crisis mode," recalls Ed Garcia, the managing director of Firestone Liberia. He redirected his entire management structure toward Ebola.
Levi Zeopueger, 40, was treated at Firestone's Ebola clinic and survived. But he lost 11 other members of his family to the virus.



Garcia's team first tried to find a hospital in the capital to care for the woman. "Unfortunately, at that time, there was no facility that could accommodate her," he says. "So we quickly realized that we had to handle the situation ourselves."

The case was detected on a Sunday. Garcia and a medical team from the company hospital spent Monday setting up an Ebola ward. Tuesday the woman was placed in isolation.

"None of us had any Ebola experience," he says. They scoured the Internet for information about how to treat Ebola. They cleared out a building on the hospital grounds and set up an isolation ward. They grabbed a bunch of hazmat suits for dealing with chemical spills at the rubber factory and gave them to the hospital staff. The suits worked just as well for Ebola cases.

Firestone immediately quarantined the woman's family. Like so many Ebola patients, she died soon after being admitted to the ward. But no one else at Firestone got infected: not her family and not the workers who transported, treated and cared for her.

The Firestone managers had the benefit of backing and resources of a major corporation something the communities around them did not.

Firestone didn't see another Ebola case for four months. Then in August, as the epidemic raced through the nearby capital, patients with Ebola started appearing at the one hospital and several clinics across the giant rubber plantation. The hospital isolation ward was expanded to 23 beds and a prefab annex was built. Containing Ebola became the number-one priority of the company. Schools in the town, which have been closed by government decree, were transformed into quarantine centers. Teachers were dispatched for door-to-door outreach.

Hundreds of people with possible exposure to the virus were placed under quarantine. Seventy-two cases were reported. Forty-eight were treated in the hospital and 18 survived. By mid-September the company's Ebola treatment unit was nearly full.

As of this weekend, however, only three patients remained: a trio of boys age 4, 9 and 17.

"So we have these three," says Dr. Benedict Wollor, coordinator for the Ebola treatment unit at Firestone. "We are concerned because by this morning the 4-year-old was just crying."

A team is getting dressed in full body suits, gloves and goggles to enter the ward: a doctor, two nurses and a man with an agricultural sprayer full of disinfectant strapped to his back. Wollor says the team has a lot of work to do before they get overheated in their industrial spacesuits.


"They have to change Pampers, bedding, even bathe them," says Wollor. "Make sure they're clean. If someone is dehydrated, open an IV line. Imagine how we maintain an IV line on a kid."

These three boys all came from outside the plantation. So even as the worst Ebola outbreak ever recorded rages all around them, Firestone appears to have blocked the virus from spreading inside its territory.

Dr. Flannery of the CDC says a key reason for Firestone's success is the close monitoring of people who have potentially been exposed to the virus and the moving of anyone who has had contact with an Ebola patient into voluntary quarantine.

By most accounts, this Ebola outbreak remains out of control, with health care workers across West Africa struggling to contain it.

Asked what's needed to turn that around, Flannery says, "More Firestones" places that have the money, resources and unwavering determination to stop Ebola.

Conrad_73's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:43 PM
Edited by Conrad_73 on Tue 10/07/14 03:44 PM
http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Africa/2014/1006/Nigeria-contains-Ebola-and-US-officials-want-to-know-more

Nigeria contains Ebola and US officials want to know more

US teams are headed to Nigeria to learn about its success in using 'contact tracing' a significant practical step that limited the spread of the virus.

By Ariel Zirulnick, Correspondent October 6, 2014

Nairobi, Kenya When Ebola reached Nigeria, health officials were worried about the populous country's ability to control the virus particularly in Lagos, the nation's coastal megacity and transport hub.

But this week, teams of American health officials are Lagos-bound to learn from Nigeria's experience in defying expectations and stopping the outbreak before it could wreak havoc.

Since July 20, the day Nigeria's so-called Patient Zero arrived in Lagos, officials have recorded a total of only 19 cases, with no new cases since Aug. 31. Last week, on the same day the US confirmed its first case of Ebola, the Center for Disease Control (CDC) proclaimed that Nigeria had stopped its outbreak.


Meanwhile, Sierra Leone, one of three West African countries hard hit by Ebola, recorded 81 new cases in the past 24 hours........

Rock's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:54 PM
Edited by Rock on Tue 10/07/14 04:36 PM





Yes, Oprah does wonderful things.


I wonder how many Alyssa Milano will take in?

Now see?
Oprah alone, could keep a starving polar bear family fed for day or two.


honey, how much room in the back yard for us to adopt a polar bear cub or two? Pleeeeeeze? tears

Yeah, we can adopt bears.
Anything for you, sweetheart.
smitten



Peacocks too? bigsmile smitten :angel:

Well...
There might be an issue.
Ya see, yogi and boo-boo will see you, me, the dogs, and the peacocks, as THE foodchain.

TJN's photo
Tue 10/07/14 03:59 PM
Edited by TJN on Tue 10/07/14 04:04 PM
I get kind of perturbed, when somebody breaks my links too.

Mary Burke running for Wisc Governor is a plagiarizer also. Think she'll win?


Ugh but she's taking the best ideas for everywhere. Wonder if she'll take ideas from her daddy's company and ship more WI jobs to China.

no photo
Tue 10/07/14 04:06 PM

I get kind of perturbed, when somebody breaks my links too.

Mary Burke running for Wisc Governor is a plagiarizer also. Think she'll win?


Ugh but she's taking the best ideas for everywhere. Wonder if she'll take ideas from her daddy's company and ship more WI jobs to China.


oh, yeah, we could use some Liberian child labor in the taconite mines that China bought out up here.

no photo
Tue 10/07/14 06:23 PM

seems they do quite well on their own!


Firestone Did What Governments Have Not: Stopped Ebola In Its Tracks

by Jason Beaubien


http://www.npr.org/blogs/goatsandsoda/2014/10/06/354054915/firestone-did-what-governments-have-not-stopped-ebola-in-its-tracks?sc=tw

The classic slogan for Firestone tires was "where the rubber meets the road."

When it comes to Ebola, the rubber met the road at the Firestone rubber plantation in Harbel, Liberia.

Harbel is a company town not far from the capital city of Monrovia. It was named in 1926 after the founder of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company, Harvey and his wife, Idabelle. Today, Firestone workers and their families make up a community of 80,000 people across the plantation.

Firestone detected its first Ebola case on March 30, when an employee's wife arrived from northern Liberia. She'd been caring for a disease-stricken woman and was herself diagnosed with the disease. Since then Firestone has done a remarkable job of keeping the virus at bay. It built its own treatment center and set up a comprehensive response that's managed to quickly stop transmission. Dr. Brendan Flannery, the head of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's team in Liberia, has hailed Firestone's efforts as resourceful, innovative and effective.

Currently the only Ebola cases on the sprawling, 185-square-mile plantation are in patients who come from neighboring towns.

Long rows of dappled rubber trees cover Harbel's landscape. Prevailing winds cause the adult trees to lean westward. Back when Firestone was still based in Ohio, employees used to joke that the trees are "bowing to Akron."

When the Ebola case was diagnosed, "we went in to crisis mode," recalls Ed Garcia, the managing director of Firestone Liberia. He redirected his entire management structure toward Ebola.
Levi Zeopueger, 40, was treated at Firestone's Ebola clinic and survived. But he lost 11 other members of his family to the virus.



Garcia's team first tried to find a hospital in the capital to care for the woman. "Unfortunately, at that time, there was no facility that could accommodate her," he says. "So we quickly realized that we had to handle the situation ourselves."

The case was detected on a Sunday. Garcia and a medical team from the company hospital spent Monday setting up an Ebola ward. Tuesday the woman was placed in isolation.

"None of us had any Ebola experience," he says. They scoured the Internet for information about how to treat Ebola. They cleared out a building on the hospital grounds and set up an isolation ward. They grabbed a bunch of hazmat suits for dealing with chemical spills at the rubber factory and gave them to the hospital staff. The suits worked just as well for Ebola cases.

Firestone immediately quarantined the woman's family. Like so many Ebola patients, she died soon after being admitted to the ward. But no one else at Firestone got infected: not her family and not the workers who transported, treated and cared for her.

The Firestone managers had the benefit of backing and resources of a major corporation something the communities around them did not.

Firestone didn't see another Ebola case for four months. Then in August, as the epidemic raced through the nearby capital, patients with Ebola started appearing at the one hospital and several clinics across the giant rubber plantation. The hospital isolation ward was expanded to 23 beds and a prefab annex was built. Containing Ebola became the number-one priority of the company. Schools in the town, which have been closed by government decree, were transformed into quarantine centers. Teachers were dispatched for door-to-door outreach.

Hundreds of people with possible exposure to the virus were placed under quarantine. Seventy-two cases were reported. Forty-eight were treated in the hospital and 18 survived. By mid-September the company's Ebola treatment unit was nearly full.

As of this weekend, however, only three patients remained: a trio of boys age 4, 9 and 17.

"So we have these three," says Dr. Benedict Wollor, coordinator for the Ebola treatment unit at Firestone. "We are concerned because by this morning the 4-year-old was just crying."

A team is getting dressed in full body suits, gloves and goggles to enter the ward: a doctor, two nurses and a man with an agricultural sprayer full of disinfectant strapped to his back. Wollor says the team has a lot of work to do before they get overheated in their industrial spacesuits.


"They have to change Pampers, bedding, even bathe them," says Wollor. "Make sure they're clean. If someone is dehydrated, open an IV line. Imagine how we maintain an IV line on a kid."

These three boys all came from outside the plantation. So even as the worst Ebola outbreak ever recorded rages all around them, Firestone appears to have blocked the virus from spreading inside its territory.

Dr. Flannery of the CDC says a key reason for Firestone's success is the close monitoring of people who have potentially been exposed to the virus and the moving of anyone who has had contact with an Ebola patient into voluntary quarantine.

By most accounts, this Ebola outbreak remains out of control, with health care workers across West Africa struggling to contain it.

Asked what's needed to turn that around, Flannery says, "More Firestones" places that have the money, resources and unwavering determination to stop Ebola.


I prefer to take on Ebola in Africa, the homeland of it's birth.
But, that's just me.biggrin

no photo
Tue 10/07/14 06:55 PM

Can you imagine what it must be like for a child .. Losing their parents to Ebola .. Shunned by everyone and left to fend for themselves. No one should ever be in this situation .. Least of all a child. Get your priorities right .. This is no longer about politics or perceived threats . It is about doing what is right and giving help to the vulnerable. The outbreak may be happening in Africa but the threat to the rest of the world is real. They need whatever resources and help other countries can offer.. If there is any hope of minimising the destruction Ebola can inflict. If relocating people and children who are ebola free .. to safety will achieve that ... then all countries should be giving them a chance. What ever happened to compassion . At the end of the day global economies will survive.., the real question is .. Will humanity.. If Ebola is not contained.


It is about doing what is right and giving help to those who are in need. By doing so each man can feel good and teach others that doing right is good for all mankind. Other nations would see this and learn that killing is bad and doing good is good. Then all nations could learn to get along and that all people should be free. And peace would fill the world forever...Nah!

Dodo_David's photo
Tue 10/07/14 08:07 PM

Can you imagine what it must be like for a child .. Losing their parents to Ebola .. Shunned by everyone and left to fend for themselves. No one should ever be in this situation .. Least of all a child. Get your priorities right .. This is no longer about politics or perceived threats . It is about doing what is right and giving help to the vulnerable. The outbreak may be happening in Africa but the threat to the rest of the world is real. They need whatever resources and help other countries can offer.. If there is any hope of minimising the destruction Ebola can inflict. If relocating people and children who are ebola free .. to safety will achieve that ... then all countries should be giving them a chance. What ever happened to compassion . At the end of the day global economies will survive.., the real question is .. Will humanity.. If Ebola is not contained.


Blondey,

You state, "all countries should be giving them a chance".
That point hasn't been disputed here.
This thread's OP doesn't suggest that all nations be involved.
Instead, it suggests that the USA has a particular responsibility.

no photo
Tue 10/07/14 08:19 PM


Can you imagine what it must be like for a child .. Losing their parents to Ebola .. Shunned by everyone and left to fend for themselves. No one should ever be in this situation .. Least of all a child. Get your priorities right .. This is no longer about politics or perceived threats . It is about doing what is right and giving help to the vulnerable. The outbreak may be happening in Africa but the threat to the rest of the world is real. They need whatever resources and help other countries can offer.. If there is any hope of minimising the destruction Ebola can inflict. If relocating people and children who are ebola free .. to safety will achieve that ... then all countries should be giving them a chance. What ever happened to compassion . At the end of the day global economies will survive.., the real question is .. Will humanity.. If Ebola is not contained.


Blondey,

You state, "all countries should be giving them a chance".
That point hasn't been disputed here.
This thread's OP doesn't suggest that all nations be involved.
Instead, it suggests that the USA has a particular responsibility.


have you ever thought about shifting responsibility

to the WHO who receives our tax money???


msharmony's photo
Tue 10/07/14 08:51 PM
we should help how we can and if we can

help them to get their own land together again instead of just dispensing them around the globe


msharmony's photo
Tue 10/07/14 08:54 PM

Can you imagine what it must be like for a child .. Losing their parents to Ebola .. Shunned by everyone and left to fend for themselves. No one should ever be in this situation .. Least of all a child. Get your priorities right .. This is no longer about politics or perceived threats . It is about doing what is right and giving help to the vulnerable. The outbreak may be happening in Africa but the threat to the rest of the world is real. They need whatever resources and help other countries can offer.. If there is any hope of minimising the destruction Ebola can inflict. If relocating people and children who are ebola free .. to safety will achieve that ... then all countries should be giving them a chance. What ever happened to compassion . At the end of the day global economies will survive.., the real question is .. Will humanity.. If Ebola is not contained.


Africans are communal and the 'shunning' may not be the case in many of the African cultures,, that being said

we have kids right here who are 'shunned' just for being poor, or having parents who are poor or ill too,, we do need to FOCUS our attention on them and also work on ways that Africans can have resources to focus on their loved ones in Africa,,,

Rock's photo
Tue 10/07/14 10:27 PM
Cabbage patch kids... Marketable
Garbage pale kids... Marketable
.
I believe, that despite potential media criticism, the line for 'Ebola Patch Kids', will be very marketable.


Dodo_David's photo
Wed 10/08/14 05:54 AM

America can sit on the fence... I have volunteered to be sent to Africa to help :-)


Seeing that the U.S. military has been sent to Africa to help stop the spread of Ebola, how can one say that America is sitting on the fence?

TJN's photo
Wed 10/08/14 07:29 AM

America can sit on the fence... I have volunteered to be sent to Africa to help :-)


In 2012, the United States provided nearly $12 billion in official development assistance (“ODA”) to African nations. The ODA is allocated to education, health, infrastructure and economic development programs in recipient countries. Currently, the United States allocates foreign aid to 47 African nations and USAID operates 27 missions on the continent.

US Foreign aid to Africa began in the 1960s as many African nations gained independence and the United States sought strategic alliances to counter the influence of the Soviet Union. With the exception of disaster and famine relief, most foreign aid to Africa began to decrease with the collapse of the Soviet Union.

In the 2000s, President Bush more than tripled aid to Africa by establishing programs such as the Child Survival and Health Programs Fund as well as the Global HIV/AIDS Initiative.

Thats sitting on the fence?