Rational fear, irrational reaction

Map showing all terrorist attacks in 2014. Click image to see full details including links to report.

Russia, Beirut, Paris, and Nigeria have all been targeted by terrorists recently with deadly results.  It’s perfectly rational, and I’ll say reasonable, for people to respond to such heinous acts with fear and trepidation.  Acts like blowing up airplanes, shooting up concert halls and restaurants, or blowing up markets where people shop to carry on in their daily lives tend to open our eyes to the notion that a terrorist act can take place anywhere at anytime.  People respond to fear in different ways, but we all react to it whether we acknowledge it or not.

Fear of the unknown is something we all have to deal with at one time or another.  Everyone has something that their afraid of or have been in a situation where fear has entered their mind.  That’s human nature.  Most people are also aware of the human “fight or flight” response to stimuli that causes fear.  There’s nothing wrong with having a fear of something or being afraid in situations where you are.  How you deal with that fear is where people differ, and that is to be expected because we are not all robotic clones of each other.

For those who think the best course of action in light of recent events is to stop Syrian refugees from entering into their countries, I offer one question.  What will that stop?  When you have an organization reaching across borders using technology to reach people in countries they’ve never come close to setting foot in, what good does stopping people fleeing from getting killed do?

I understand the idea and even acknowledge there’s the ability for terrorists to blend in with refugees escaping death and traveling to other countries to do harm.  Our politicians are all jumping on that bandwagon that stopping Syrian refugees from coming to America is going to keep us safe.  State governors are saying they won’t accept any refugees from Syria in order to keep their people safe.  Some politicians have what I would call dumbass reasoning, but that’s their prerogative to do so.  They represent the people who elected them.  I offer a short list of names to these politicians:

  1. Christopher Lee Cornell
  2. Daniel Patrick Boyd
  3. Adam Gadahn
  4. Abdul Rahman Yasin
  5. Anwar Al-Awlaki
  6. Omar Hammami
  7. John Walker Lindh
  8. David Headley
  9. Colleen LaRose aka “Jihad Jane”

If any of the names sound familiar, that’s because they’re all terrorists or have been arrested for terrorist-related plots.  They were not Syrian refugees.  They were not even immigrants.  They were all Born-In-The-USA Americans, every last one of them.  Stopping immigration would not have stopped them.  Shutting the borders would have done nothing.

I’m not posting this to suggest that nothing can or should be done.  My point is that irrational reaction does nothing to make any of us safer than we were the day before yesterday.  I’d even go as far to suggest that caving to anti-immigrant and/or anti-Muslim rhetoric does more to aid terrorists in indoctrinating new terrorists than anything we can do to stop them.  Our irrational reactions do more to aid and comfort the true enemy than what we realize.

Bombs and bullets cannot kill ideas.  I am a firm believer in that.  One idea can only be defeated by another idea.  For example, we defeated Hitler’s Germany in WWII, yet Stormfront still exists.  There are still anti-Semitic, White Supremacist organizations around pushing the same ideas that Hitler did with his Aryan Nation idea.  Assassinations and bombings did not stop the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s either.  I can remember hearing about Middle Eastern terrorist organizations when I was in grade school, so it’s not like the current groups originated this whole thing.

We need to stop those who wish to do harm to innocent people, not just us.  It doesn’t matter what nation, religion, or ethnic group those innocent people are a part of.  We have to think about our actions in how we go about fighting these groups because the things we do can end up leading to us having to fight a larger group in the future.  Bullets and bombs are short-term remedies for short-term problems.  In the long run, you can’t bomb an idea out of existence, so we will have to beat the idea with an even better idea if we want to win this battle.  The anti-everything rhetoric isn’t going to be a winning idea when the opposition uses that to further entrench their idea that we’re at war with each other.  Hopefully mankind will soon realize this and change pathways.

Map of cities at risk of terrorist attack in 2015 as compiled in a report by Verisk Maplecroft which was released on May 25, 2015. Click on image for more info.

Latest Ebola news, and it ain’t pretty

An Ebola treatment clinic in Monrovia was attacked by a group of youngsters claiming that the disease was made up by the West.  In the process, many sick patients have just disappeared into thin air.  The marauders looted the clinic (how smart is that?) and made off with mattresses and other items that were soiled by the body fluids of the sick.  It’s worth mentioning that the virus is spread by contact with body fluids of those showing symptoms of being sick.  In other words, those idiots just screwed themselves and anyone else that came in contact with the items from the clinic.

At the same time, there are sick people crossing from Liberia into Guinea, even though the Guinea border was supposedly closed around two weeks ago.  It seems as though many people there don’t believe this stuff is real.  I can’t grasp that given that there are reports that the government is very slow about picking up the dead bodies.  It seems that leaving the bodies around will lead to the spread of this instead of trying to limit the exposure by picking up and placing the bodies in quarantine as quickly as possible.

There’s also the thinking that the current counts are underrepresented of the true number of cases.  That may have some validity since patient zero was determined to have gotten sick in December of 2013.  That’s eight months plus of this virus being spread around.  I’m amazed that it didn’t jump the borders of the three original countries until Patrick Sawyer landed in Nigeria.

Here’s the most recent update from the CDC dated August 13, 2014:

Guinea

  • The Guinea Ministry of Health announced a total of 519 suspect and confirmed cases of Ebola virus disease (EVD), including 376 laboratory confirmed, and 380 deaths.
  • Affected districts include Conakry, Guéckédou, Macenta, Kissidougou, Dabola, Djingaraye, Télimélé, Boffa, Kouroussa, Dubreka, Fria, Siguiri, Pita, Nzerekore, and Yamou; several are no longer active areas of EVD transmission (see map).
  • In Guinea’s capital city, Conakry, 95 suspect cases have been reported to meet the clinical definition for EVD, including 42 fatal cases.

Liberia

  • The Ministry of Health and Social Welfare of Liberia and WHO have reported 786 suspect and confirmed EHF cases, including 190 laboratory confirmations, and 413 deaths.

Nigeria

  • The Nigerian Ministry of Health and WHO reported 12 suspect and confirmed cases, including 11 laboratory confirmed, and 4 deaths.

Sierra Leone

  • The Ministry of Health and Sanitation of Sierra Leone and WHO reported a cumulative total of 810 suspect and confirmed cases, including 733 laboratory confirmed cases, and 348 deaths.
  • Cases have been reported from all 12 Sierra Leone districts.

People were quick to laugh at the CDC having plans to fight a “Zombie apocalypse”, but that might not be such a bad contingency to plan for.  Ebola isn’t going to create zombies as they are usually created in the movies.  The idea of how the contagion spreads by contact, however, isn’t too far off from reality.  Finding a way to contain this virus is the only way to ensure the safety of us all.  There’s already been isolated cases of people being quarantined under suspicion of being sick.  Thank goodness that this has only spread to one other country beyond the original three so far.  I hope it stays that way and we can quickly get it under control.

 

 

Add Nigeria to Ebola outbreak list

From ABC News:

Nigerian health authorities raced to stop the spread of Ebola on Saturday after a man sick with one of the world’s deadliest diseases brought it by plane to Lagos, Africa’s largest city with 21 million people.

The fact that the traveler from Liberia could board an international flight also raised new fears that other passengers could take the disease beyond Africa due to weak inspection of passengers and the fact Ebola’s symptoms are similar to other diseases.

Officials in the country of Togo, where the sick man’s flight had a stopover, also went on high alert after learning that Ebola could possibly have spread to a fifth country.

Reportedly, the traveler did not show any signs of Ebola infection when he first boarded the flight.  By the time he reached Lagos, he was suffering from diarrhea and vomiting.  I’m not sure how long the flights were, but the close proximity of the countries would suggest that his symptoms progressed quite rapidly.  That, or his symptoms were ignored when he first boarded the flight.  The traveler was identified as Patrick Sawyer, a consultant for the Liberian Ministry of Finance.

I posted about this outbreak before as it’s the largest outbreak ever.  It was initially confined within three countries in a regional outbreak.  Now, there are two additional countries, Nigeria and Togo, that are on alert and looking for cases.  In addition, two US citizens have been infected with the virus while working to help contain and treat the outbreak in Liberia.  Both people work in the medical field, and that field has a significant risk due to the proximity of infected persons.