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LoungeMachine
04-27-2009, 12:48 PM
The Nation Blogs The Beat

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GOP Know-Nothings Fought Pandemic Preparedness

posted by John Nichols on 04/27/2009 @ 08:00am

When House Appropriations Committee chairman David Obey, the Wisconsin Democrat who has long championed investment in pandemic preparation, included roughly $900 million for that purpose in this year's emergency stimulus bill, he was ridiculed by conservative operatives and congressional Republicans.

Obey and other advocates for the spending argued, correctly, that a pandemic hitting in the midst of an economic downturn could turn a recession into something far worse -- with workers ordered to remain in their homes, workplaces shuttered to avoid the spread of disease, transportation systems grinding to a halt and demand for emergency services and public health interventions skyrocketing. Indeed, they suggested, pandemic preparation was essential to any responsible plan for renewing the U.S. economy.

But former White House political czar Karl Rove and key congressional Republicans -- led by Maine Senator Susan Collins -- aggressively attacked the notion that there was a connection between pandemic preparation and economic recovery.

Now, as the World Health Organization says a deadly swine flu outbreak that apparently began in Mexico but has spread to the United States has the potential to develop into a pandemic, Obey's attempt to secure the money seems eerily prescient.

And his partisan attacks on his efforts seem not just creepy, but dangerous.

The current swine flu outbreak is not a pandemic, and there is reason to hope that it can be contained.

But it has already believed to have killed more than 100 people in a neighboring country and sickened dozens of Americans -- causing the closing of schools and other public facilities in U.S. cities.

Dr. Anne Schuchat, the U.S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Interim Deputy Director for Science and Public Health Program, explained to reporters on Saturday that, because the cases that have been discovered so far are so widely spread (in California, Kansas, New York, Ohio and Texas), the outbreak is already "beyond containment."

On Sunday, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano announced that a national "public health emergency" had been declatred. Notably, the second question at the White House press conference on the emergency had to do with the potential impact on the economic recovery.

On Monday, the question began to be answered, as Associated Press reported -- under the headline: "World Markets Struck By Swine Flu Fears" -- that: "World stock markets fell Monday as investors worried that a deadly outbreak of swine flu in Mexico could go global and derail any global economic recovery."

Before U.S. markets opened, the Wall Street Journal reported: "U.S. stock futures fell sharply Monday as the outbreak of deadly swine flu stoked fears that a possible recovery in the global economy could be derailed."

That's unsettling.

To many Americans, genuinely scary.

Not faked-up, politically self-serving scary, like the arguments Rove advanced in February to frame opposition to the stimulus package Obey crafted in the House.

George Bush's political manipulator dismissed Obey's proposals as "disturbing" and "laden with new spending programs." He said the congressman was peddling a plan based on "deeply flawed assumptions."

Like what?

Rove specifically complained that Obey's proposal included "$462 million for the Centers for Disease Control, and $900 million for pandemic flu preparations."

This was wrong, the political operative charged, because the health care sector added jobs in 2008.

As bizarre as that criticism may sound -- especially now -- Rove's argument was picked up by House and Senate Republicans, who made it an essential message in their attacks on the legislation. Even as Rove and his compatriots argued that a stimulus bill should include initiatives designed to shore-up and maintain any recovery, they consistently, and loudly, objected to spending money to address the potentially devastating economic impact of a major public health emergency.

The attack on pandemic preparation became so central to the GOP strategies that AP reported in February: "Republicans, meanwhile, plan to push for broader and deeper tax cuts, to trim major spending provisions that support Democrats' longer-term policy goals, and to try to knock out what they consider questionable spending items, such as $870 million to combat the flu and $400 million to slow the spread of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases."

Famously, Maine Senator Collins, the supposedly moderate Republican who demanded cuts in health care spending in exchange for her support of a watered-down version of the stimulus, fumed about the pandemic funding: "Does it belong in this bill? Should we have $870 million in this bill No, we should not."

Even now, Collins continues to use her official website to highlight the fact that she led the fight to strip the pandemic preparedness money out of the Senate's version of the stimulus measure.

The Republicans essentially succeeded. The Senate version of the stimulus plan included no money whatsoever for pandemic preparedness. In the conference committee that reconciled the House and Senate plans, Obey and his allies succeeded in securing $50 million for improving information systems at the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

But state and local governments, and the emergency services that would necessarily be on the frontlines in any effort to contain a pandemic, got nothing.

Did Rove, Collins and their compatriots want a pandemic?

Of course not.

They were just playing politics, in the exceptionally narrow and irresponsible manner that characterized the Republican response to the stimulus debate – and that, because of Democratic compromises in the Senate, dumbed down the plan President Obama ultimately signed.

No serious player in Washington has been unaware of the fears with regard to a flu pandemic. They have been well-publicized and well-discussed. Even Collins admitted as she objected to the House allocation for preparedness: "I think that everybody in the room is concerned about a pandemic flu."

And it is important to point out that no serious player in Washington could have been unaware of the threat that a pandemic -- or even the fear of one -- would pose to economic renewal. Every discussion about a pandemic begins with the public health component but moves quickly to an acknowledgement that an outbreak, and the ensuing quarantines, would bring economic activity to a virtual standstill.

So Rove, Collins and those who echoed their know-nothing appeals understood that they were wrong.

But they bet that they would be able to score their political points without any consequences.

Now that fears of a pandemic have been raised, however, it is appropriate to ask whether individuals who are so manifestly irresponsible and partisan should be taken seriously.

This is an especially important concern with regard to Collins, who portrays herself as a moderate who tries to make things work in Washington.

Senate Democratic leaders bowed to Collins in the process of crafting their chamber's version of the stimulus. In doing so, they eliminated more than 80 percent of the modest amount of money that had been allocated for pandemic preparedness -- and all of the money that would have helped emergency services.

Collins played politics with public health, and the economic recovery. That makes her about as bad a player as you will find in a town full of bad players.

But Senate Democrats bent to her demands. That makes them, at the very least, complicit in the weakening of what needed to be a muscular plan.

The bottom line is that there were no heroes in either party on the Senate side of the ugly process that ridiculed and then eliminated pandemic preparedness funding.

There is, however, a hero on the House side. Throughout the process, David Obey battled to get Congress to recognize that a pandemic would threaten not just public health but a fragile economic recovery.


GOP Know-Nothings Fought Pandemic Preparedness (http://www.thenation.com/blogs/thebeat/430261/gop_know_nothings_fought_pandemic_preparedness)

kwame k
04-27-2009, 02:59 PM
Geez, Rove not working in the best interest of this country? The hell you say.

I pray to God that this doesn't spread but it highlights the fact that politicians are always more worried about scoring political points than they are about protecting it's citizens.

Another terrorist attack may be biological and it's already happened. Remember the Anthrax attacks after 9/11? We need to fund this and if certain government officials voted against funding this they need to be thrown out of office. If this outbreak continues to get worse, their careers will most likely be over.

kwame k
04-27-2009, 09:19 PM
MEXICO CITY – Two weeks after the first known swine flu death, Mexico still hasn't given medicine to the families of the dead. It hasn't determined where the outbreak began or how it spread. And while the government urges anyone who feels sick to go to hospitals, feverish people complain ambulance workers are scared to pick them up.

A portrait is emerging of a slow and confused response by Mexico to the gathering swine flu epidemic. And that could mean the world is flying blind into a global health storm.

Despite an annual budget of more than $5 billion, Mexico's health secretary said Monday that his agency hasn't had the resources to visit the families of the dead. That means doctors haven't begun treatment for the population most exposed to swine flu, and most apt to spread it.

It also means medical sleuths don't know how the victims were infected — key to understanding how the epidemic began and how it can be contained.

Foreign health officials were hesitant Monday to speak critically about Mexico's response, saying they want to wait until more details emerge before passing judgment. But already, Mexicans were questioning the government's image of a country that has the crisis under control.

"Nobody believes the government anymore," said Edgar Rocha, a 28-year-old office messenger. He said the lack of information is sowing distrust: "You haven't seen a single interview with the sick!"

The political consequences could be serious. China was heavily criticized during the outbreak of SARS for failing to release details about the disease, feeding rumors and fear. And Mexico's failed response to a catastrophic 1985 earthquake is largely credited with the demise of the party that had ruled the country since the 1920s.

"That is foremost in the minds of Mexican policymakers now," said George Grayson at the College of William & Mary in Virginia. "They're thinking, 'We don't want another '85.'"

Indeed, Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova was defensive at a news conference Monday as he was peppered with questions about why Mexico took so long to identify the outbreak, attempt to contain its spread and provide information.

"We never had this kind of epidemic in the world," he said. "This is the first time we have this kind of virus."

It remained unclear where and how the epidemic began, how it has spread, who it has killed or how fast it is growing. And the government has yet to take some basic steps critical to containing any outbreak, such as quick treatment of people who had contact with the victims.

In the town of Xonacatlan, just west of Mexico City, Antonia Cortes Borbolla told The Associated Press that nobody has given her medicine in the week since her husband succumbed to raging fever and weakened lungs that a lab has confirmed as swine flu.

No health workers have inspected her home, asked how her husband might have contracted the illness or tested the neighbors' pigs, she said.

Cordova acknowledged that her case isn't unique.

"We haven't given medicine to all of them because we still don't have enough personnel," he said.

Cordova said he couldn't provide information on the victims for reasons of confidentiality, but promised to eventually release a statistical breakdown. He said he couldn't provide that data now "because it's being processed."

Asked whether he could at least say how many of the 20 confirmed victims were men and how many were women, he said: "I don't have that information."

The government has insisted it acted quickly and decisively when presented with the evidence of a new virus.

But even as it did so, it acknowledged the outbreak began earlier than April 12, the date it had previously linked to the first case. Cordova confirmed Monday that a 4-year-old boy who was part of an outbreak in eastern Veracruz state that began in February had swine flu. He later recovered.

Residents of the town of Perote said at the time that they had a new, aggressive bug — even taking to the streets to demonstrate against the pig farm they blamed for their illness — but were told they were suffering from a typical flu. It was only after U.S. labs confirmed a swine flu outbreak that Mexican officials sent the boy's sample in for swine flu testing.

Mexico's Agriculture Department said Monday that inspectors found no sign of swine flu among pigs around the farm in Veracruz, and that no infected pigs have been found yet anywhere in Mexico.

Meanwhile, some people complained that health workers were turning them away, even as officials urged people to seek treatment quickly if they felt symptoms of flu coming on.

Elias Camacho, a 31-year-old truck driver with fever, cough and body aches, was ordered out of a government ambulance Sunday because paramedics complained he might be contagious, his father-in-law told the AP. When family members took him to a hospital in a taxi, Jorge Martinez Cruz said, a doctor told him he wasn't sick.

Camacho was finally admitted to the hospital — and placed in an area marked "restricted" — after a doctor at a private clinic notified state health authorities, Martinez said.

In Mexico City, Jose Isaac Cepeda said two hospitals refused to treat his fever, diarrhea and joint pains. The first turned him away because he wasn't registered in the public health system, he said.

The second, he said, didn't let him in "because they say they're too busy."

___

Associated Press writers Olga Rodriguez in Xonacatlan and Peter Orsi and Lisa J. Adams in Mexico City contributed to this report.

Link (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/lt_swine_flu_mexico;_ylt=AsfXFr8Z8JXeqbwhJKmizAes0 NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTJrdWxldmdnBGFzc2V0A2FwLzIwMDkwNDI4L 2x0X3N3aW5lX2ZsdV9tZXhpY28EY3BvcwMxBHBvcwMzBHNlYwN 5bl90b3Bfc3RvcnkEc2xrA2Z1bGxuYnNwc3Rvcg--)

kwame k
04-27-2009, 09:22 PM
Mexico knew about this for 15 days, maybe as far back as February and said nothing about this. With all the illegal crossings and legal crossings this should have been dealt with when they first knew about it.

lesfunk
04-27-2009, 10:06 PM
Mexico knew about this for 15 days, maybe as far back as February and said nothing about this. With all the illegal crossings and legal crossings this should have been dealt with when they first knew about it.

Ah, the joys of cheap labor

kwame k
04-27-2009, 10:11 PM
Ah, the joys of cheap labor

That's a hell of an export.

ELVIS
04-27-2009, 10:26 PM
"repukes" ??

Keep that good ole left / right paradigm crap alive while you ignore information about this supposed "swine flu."

What if it's bioterrorism ? Could be, right ??

But let's play the repuke game instead...


:elvis:

FORD
04-27-2009, 10:41 PM
"repukes" ??

Keep that good ole left / right paradigm crap alive while you ignore information about this supposed "swine flu."

What if it's bioterrorism ? Could be, right ??

But let's play the repuke game instead...


:elvis:

Well, if this pandemic kicks into high gear, I sincerely hope they get a vaccine out in time to inoculate people like yourself who will obviously be at risk when all the sick people show up at your workplace.

Which would have been a Hell of a lot easier if those funds hadn't been cut.

Bioterrorism? Not from assholes in caves on the other side of the planet. But possibly from a laboratory in Maryland - which had some shit go "missing" last week.

kwame k
04-27-2009, 10:49 PM
Army investigators are close to closing a probe into the disappearance of deadly pathogens at Fort Detrick's infectious disease laboratory in Frederick and have found no evidence yet of criminal misconduct, the Army's Criminal Investigation Command said yesterday.

The investigation of the Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases is "in the final stages of its mandatory review process before being closed," said Christopher Grey, a spokesman for the criminal investigation division. The command "has found no evidence to date of any criminality related to the unaccounted-for items," he said.

Since last year, investigators have been trying to discover what happened to three small vials of Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus that were unaccounted for, according to Caree Vander Linden, the spokeswoman for the lab.

Although the quantity of the missing virus sample is small, the investigation shows how seriously military authorities take a possible security breach at the Army lab, which is responsible for developing countermeasures to such potential biological agents as anthrax and Ebola. The investigation was first reported yesterday in the Frederick News-Post.

The virus that causes Venezuelan equine encephalitis is mosquito borne and usually causes a mild flulike illness but can also cause brain inflammation and death. It has potential for use as a biological weapon but is far less lethal than some other agents the lab works with.

Vander Linden said that when one scientist left the institute several years ago, he handed down his materials to another scientist, who left three years later. Last year, a successor took an inventory of the samples and found three vials missing, triggering an investigation, she said. The vials were probably missing because a freezer in which they were kept failed, destroying the batch, she said.

Vander Linden declined to name the scientists involved Link (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/04/22/AR2009042202005.html?hpid=topnews)

lesfunk
04-28-2009, 01:35 AM
From the Daily Egyptian:

Column: Swine flu, the Illuminati, nanobots and George Bush
The Weekly Wenger
Danny Wenger


Published: Monday, April 27, 2009
Updated: Monday, April 27, 2009
I knew this day was coming. I knew, and everyone laughed at me.

They call it swine flu, but what they really mean is the hand that has sat in the shadows is finally reaching out to choke freedom from the face of the Earth.

Whose hand is reaching? You know you know the answer. You know because you’ve tried to ignore the facts; facts that stared you in the face like a 1,000-pound bull with the head of a shark, ready to charge and gorge and rip you to shreds. You know because you tried to tell yourself it wasn’t real, that it couldn’t happen.

But it is real. It is happening. You can no longer ignore it.

The Illuminati have struck.

Just two weeks before the sinister under-doings of the centuries-old secret society are plastered across the big screen they decided to strike. They don’t want the world to know about them through some Tom Hanks film. They’d rather we feel their power and wrath firsthand.

The swine flu started in Mexico, one of the strongest holds of the Illuminati’s archenemy — the Catholic Church. With more than 80 million Catholics in Mexico it only made sense to strike there first. Also, Mexico is so close to the United States and the border is so frequently crossed that it was strategically vital to infect Mexico first to transfer the flu here.
In Mexico, people are scared to go into the streets. They are scared to go to mass and school. That is exactly what the Illuminati want.

As everyone starts wearing masks, it will be easier for Illuminati henchmen to sneak about. With everyone wearing a mask, no one can be identified. They can slip into the crowds and no one will notice.

That’s how they will undermine society. As the swine flu spreads and more and more people wear masks they can move in larger numbers, take over cities, set up secret death camps and steal every freedom you had but never really had because they’ve always been in control. You only thought you were free. But now you won’t be free. You’ll only be dead.

Of course, despite centuries of procuring wealth and power, they couldn’t pull this off alone. They needed help. Even Illuminati have limits. That’s why years ago, while he was attending Harvard, they recruited George W. Bush. It started with Skull and Bones, and from Harvard George was flown to Venice (the Illuminati base) in the world’s first stealth helicopter (built by the Illuminati in 1962) to be inducted to into the Upper Circle of Crimson. They knew they could use him, and by pulling their shadow strings they rigged the 2000 election.

With the world distracted, first by Sept. 11 and later the Iraq War, Bush secretly poured billions in gold, originally hidden in the basement of the Twin Towers (that’s why he had to take them down) by the International Monetary Fund, into building trillions of nanobots — machines so tiny they crawl between synapses in the brain and block independent signals and send their own signals, controlling you like a zombie puppet.

The flu “vaccine” stockpiled over the past eight years by the U.S. government is really syringes filled with nanobots. The only thing you’ll be vaccinated against is your own free will.

Centuries of plotting and years of secret government experiments have led to this. They say there were cover-ups for Sept. 11 and the Iraq War, but what the puppet media doesn’t realize is those things are the cover up!

It’s almost too late. Fight back now.

Wenger is a senior studying journalism and Spanish.

LoungeMachine
04-28-2009, 05:07 AM
"repukes" ??

Keep that good ole left / right paradigm crap alive while you ignore information about this supposed "swine flu."

What if it's bioterrorism ? Could be, right ??

But let's play the repuke game instead...


:elvis:

What if?

ALL the more reason to be pissed at the REPUKES then, silly.

:gulp:

ULTRAMAN VH
04-28-2009, 07:31 AM
Well, according to President Obama there is no cause for alarm. Gosh and even if there was, he would just fly up into the sky and expel the deadly contagion with one gust from his super breath. I don't know about the rest of you, but I sleep soundly knowing that he is watching over us.

scamper
04-28-2009, 08:50 AM
Have some chicken soup and drink your liquids, SARS 1.2.

Big Train
04-29-2009, 02:45 AM
It's kind of interesting, if I can offer a counter opinion. Collins herself didn't say that the funding wasn't important or necessary. She saw it as a separate deal and should not be funded in an economic stimulus bill. It is a healthcare matter, not a stimulus matter. I agree with that. It's some creative leaping required to say "they don't give a fuck about you" on this issue (and some noncreative "blogging" around the Internet to spread the desired message to the Obamabots), when it was just a lucky break spin-wise for the Dems. More importantly, why wouldn't this just be entered into as a general budget item, as it is national defense? Why would you add it as a supplement under the guise of it being stimulus of any kind?

Satan
04-29-2009, 02:55 AM
Well, if this flu pandemic really hits hard, Hell's gonna need a $666 Billion "stimulus package" just to be able to handle all the new arrivals.

Big Train
04-29-2009, 02:56 AM
BTW, is Charles Schumer a full on Repuke?? A Demipuke?

Collins didn't vote in favor of swine flu attack (http://morningsentinel.mainetoday.com/view/columns/6262800.html)

Don't blame Susan Collins if you get the swine flu -- no matter what her lefty critics say.
The Republican senator from Maine made her support of President Barack Obama's stimulus bill contingent, in part, on stripping almost $900 million in pandemic flu preparation funds from the bill. Collins said that while the funding was important, it didn't belong in a bill targeted to economic recovery.

She and others were concerned about a potential pandemic, Collins said at the time. She should know: She's the ranking Republican on the Senate's Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, which oversees government programs on bioterrorism and other similar public health threats. "But does it belong in this bill?" she asked her colleagues. "Should we have $870 million in this bill? No, we should not."

The money got pulled.

And now that a Mexican swine flu outbreak has prompted a public health emergency declaration here in the United States, the liberal blogosphere, in its nastiest, I-told-you-so tones, is positively ripping with anti-Collins attacks. If you get sick, it's Collins' fault.

"Republicans Stripped Pandemic Flu Preparedness From Stimulus" is the banner over the Daily Kos' hit piece on Collins.

"Thanks for the swine flu," writes one critic on Daily Kos; "Thanks for weakening our nation. Thanks for exposing us to great harm," writes another.

"GOP Know-Nothings Fought Pandemic Preparedness," blares the Nation Magazine's headline on a column that declared Collins "dangerously short-sighted."

Columnist John Nichols just drips with irony when he magnanimously declares, "Did Rove, Collins and their compatriots want a pandemic? Of course not."

But thanks for asking the question, John.

Here's the problem with this line of attack: It's a cheap shot, and it's not the whole picture.

It presumes that all funding for fighting pandemics would come from the stimulus bill. That's not the case. While Collins helped nix the pandemic money in the stimulus, she had earlier joined a bipartisan group of senators in requesting $905 million for preparedness programs at the Department of Health and Human Services. That's on top of $7 billion appropriated since 2006 for such widespread health emergencies. An Associated Press report Tuesday quotes a White House spokesman as saying that current funding for anti-flu efforts was sufficient for now. And according to her office, Collins has voted in favor of billions of dollars in pandemic flu preparedness funding since 2005.

As for the whole picture, what's good for the goose is good for the gander. So if you want someone to blame for the swine flu, you can blame Democrats, too, not just Republicans. New York Democratic Sen. Charles Schumer had no love for the pandemic funding, as he told the New York Post during the heated negotiations over the stimulus bill:

"[Schumer] said the compromise hammered out between Senate Democrats and moderate Republicans -- which has enough support to get it past any threat of a filibuster -- was far better than that passed by the House on Jan. 29.

" 'All those little porky things that the House put in, the money for the [National] Mall or the sexually transmitted diseases or the flu pandemic, they're all out,' Schumer said."

You just have to love the blogosphere. Whether they get it right or wrong, the partisan hacks are never in doubt.

hideyoursheep
04-29-2009, 03:22 AM
All the more reason to get into single-payer health care.

ZahZoo
04-29-2009, 10:00 AM
Well, if this pandemic kicks into high gear, I sincerely hope they get a vaccine out in time to inoculate people like yourself who will obviously be at risk when all the sick people show up at your workplace.

Which would have been a Hell of a lot easier if those funds hadn't been cut.

Bioterrorism? Not from assholes in caves on the other side of the planet. But possibly from a laboratory in Maryland - which had some shit go "missing" last week.

Ah... senior... we haven't developed a rapid-deploy flu "vaccine" per se known to man. What we do have to combat this presently is flu treatments like theraflu. There's enough around to handle most cases... biggest issue is logistics for distribution. That's being worked already.

Due to the time it takes to replicate and brew up flu vaccines... an actual vacination for this strain won't be available until next flu season and you can guarantee it will be included.

The funding you speak of would not have enabled any other response other than what's being dealt with now. The WHO in conjunction with the CDC already have sufficient pandemic programs, processes and resources to deal with this. Most of corporate America has already instituted their pandemic responses and are tracking and taking measures to assist in containment to minimize business disruption.

Biggest problem with today's situation is fucking Mexico failed to notify and handle this in accordance with WHO and CDC standards. They sat on this too long and now it's up to Level 4 (human to human transmission) regional outbreaks globally. Too late to contain, but measures can be taken to slow it and prevent spreading to the next level. Mexico also failed to treat and respond to the local outbreak which resulted in preventable deaths.