Monday Reads: Why Voting Matters more than Ever

imageGood Morning!

I spent some time this weekend canvassing the Esplanade Ridge neighborhood of the 7th Ward.  I hadn’t canvassed neighborhoods since I ran for office 20 years ago.  I’m about this close to going back to being a clinic escort volunteer also.  I was scared to death of the nascent right wing radical christian movement back then, but now I’m just mad as hell and not going to hide from them any more.

I was sitting next to a seventy-three year old black woman in my first organizational meeting for Mary Landrieu’s GOTV effort here in New Orleans a few weeks ago.  We were mostly surrounded by very young and optimistic activists.  Demographics that have a lot to lose depending on the outcome of these midterm elections were well represented.

We were asked to introduce ourselves by telling others why we were there.  My answer was pretty easy.  I’m tired of the backlash on rights around the country. I explained that my grandmother was a middle aged mother before she could even vote and that every young woman owed it to their grandmothers to get out there and defend their rights. I said restrictions on voting and rights were pulled down by people that wanted to make life better for us and now we have to turn around and do the same for those that come after us.  That woman sitting next to me said that every time a black person does not vote it’s a slap in the face of Dr. King.

Think about that.

It may seem futile.  It may drive you nuts to read about all the insanity going on.  But, we have to stop this wherever we are right now because the kids coming after us deserve better.  Many of us are the children of people who did a lot of fighting and activism to give us the rights that we have today.  We owe it to them to pass a better situation forward like they did for us.

My Great Uncle Jack died from the lingering effects of Mustard Gas in the War to End all Wars.  We now seem to have perpetual war and even though we have no money to feed our nation’s starving children, there seems to be more than enough money for drones, air strikes, and military advisers.

Quite a few of us spent years trying to get police departments to put violent crimes and rapes against women and children in the major crimes divisions instead of the property crimes area that housed them 40 years ago.  We fought for laws that gave credence to the victim’s testimony so that she didn’t require at least two witnesses to prove sexual assault and so that any personal information about her other than what was going on at the time of the crime couldn’t enter into the courtroom.

Yet, look at the problems we still face.  Many fought for my girls and me so we could control our bodies and not rely on back alley abortions or rich relatives to get us to where we could get birth control or abortions. We are nearly there again. Look at things now.  Why, they’re even trying to tell us that slavery ended voluntarily and that we shouldn’t make a point of teaching our kids about the internment of Japanese Americans during WW2 or atrocities that were committed along The Trail of Tears or at Wounded Knee. Right wing nuts say that history should be glossed over and forgotten in case any kids find out that our past wasn’t all parades and prayers in the classroom to the proper imaginary friend.

f5ac82c403345cc091c80fad60a44326Elections matter now more than ever.

Here, in Louisiana, we are losing so many things to the damage done by oil companies and the attempt to make the river more compliant to commerce.  We have a very ambitious lawsuit pending against these interests and the governor and government of Louisiana is doing everything it can to hurt YFT123suffragettethe people and environment of Louisiana.  Whoever voted these jerks into office is killing themselves, their livelihoods, and the living things down here up to and including people. The companies that have damaged our coasts and wetlands should pay for their destruction and its consequences.

Beneath the surface, the oil and gas industry has carved more than 50,000 wells since the 1920s, creating pockets of air in the marsh that accelerate the land’s subsidence. The industry has also incised 10,000 linear miles of pipelines, which connect the wells to processing facilities; and canals, which allow ships to enter the marsh from the sea. Over time, as seawater eats away at the roots of the adjacent marsh, the canals expand. By its own estimate, the oil and gas industry concedes that it has caused 36 percent of all wetlands loss in southeastern Louisiana. (The Interior Department has placed the industry’s liability as low as 15 percent and as high as 59 percent.) A better analogy than disappearing football fields has been proposed by the historian John M. Barry, who has lived in the French Quarter on and off since 1972. Barry likens the marsh to a block of ice. The reduction of sediment in the Mississippi, the construction of levees and the oil and gas wells “created a situation akin to taking the block of ice out of the freezer, so it begins to melt.” Dredging canals and pipelines “is akin to stabbing that block of ice with an ice pick.”

The oil and gas industry has extracted about $470 billion in natural resources from the state in the last two decades, with the tacit blessing of the federal and state governments and without significant opposition from environmental groups. Oil and gas is, after all, Louisiana’s leading industry, responsible for around a billion dollars in annual tax revenue. Last year, industry executives had reason to be surprised, then, when they were asked to pay damages. The request came in the form of the most ambitious, wide-ranging environmental lawsuit in the history of the United States. And it was served by the most unlikely of antagonists, a former college-football coach, competitive weight lifter and author of dense, intellectually robust 500-page books of American history: John M. Barry.

When Hurricane Katrina made landfall in Louisiana on Aug. 29, 2005, John Barry was a year and a half into writing his sixth book, “Roger Williams and the Creation of the American Soul,” about the puritan theologian’s efforts to define the limits of political power. Barry is not a fast writer; his books take him, on average, eight years to complete. “I tend,” Barry says, “to obsess.” Earlier in his career, he spent nearly a decade as a political journalist, writing about Congress, an experience he drew upon for his first book, “The Ambition and the Power.” But after that book’s publication, he quit journalism and cocooned himself in research, reading and writing. He took on vast, complex episodes in American history that in his rendering become Jacobean dramas about tectonic struggles for power. “The Ambition and the Power” would make an appropriate subtitle for any of his books — particularly “Rising Tide,” his history of the 1927 Mississippi River flood, the most destructive in American history.

Barry’s research for “Rising Tide” had made him an amateur expert on flood prevention, and in the days after Hurricane Katrina, he received requests from editors and television-news producers for interviews. He accepted nearly every one of them and within days of the storm had become one of the city’s most visible ambassadors in the national press. “I felt I had an obligation,” Barry told me, “to convince people that the city was worth rebuilding.”

Like many others, Barry was frustrated that he couldn’t figure out why New Orleans had flooded so catastrophically. When he studied the numbers — the wind shear on Lake Pontchartrain, the storm surge, the inches of rainfall — they didn’t add up. After making calls to some of his old sources, he concluded that the levees hadn’t been overtopped, as officials from the Army Corps of Engineers assumed, but had collapsed because of design flaws. (He was among the first to draw attention to this fact in an Op-Ed article published in The New York Times that October.) Barry concluded that just as in 1927, people died because of cynical decisions made by shortsighted politicians drawing on bad science. For Barry, Hurricane Katrina was not the story of a natural disaster; it was a story of politics, science and power.

a2f886cad0b9662f2e5a35761211db3bThe interest of we the people is not served by protecting the very few rich that control so much wealth and income in our country.  They are not job creators.  They are wealth extractors.  Just yesterday, JJ reminded us how important the Senate Race is in her state.  The Republican Candidate may talk about Job Creation on the campaign trail but to the folks that matter he brags about Job Outsourcing.

Yes, it’s late in the cycle, and of course all sorts of “fundamentals” are baked into the cake, and without question, many voters probably won’t hear about this or understand what it’s about. But still, having said all that, this report from Politico’s Bresnahan and Raju is not good news for GA GOP Senate candidate David Purdue, who’s already been hammered in both the primaries and the general election for being a Mitt-Romney-like specialist in corporate downsizing:

David Perdue has run aggressively as a “job creator,” touting his record as a top executive with Fortune 500 companies as the chief selling point in his Georgia Senate campaign.
Yet during a controversial chapter in his record — a nine-month stint in 2002-03 as CEO of failed North Carolina textile manufacturer Pillowtex Corp. — Perdue acknowledged that he was hired, at least in part, to outsource manufacturing jobs from the company. Perdue specialized throughout his career in finding low-cost manufacturing facilities and labor, usually in Asia.
During a July 2005 deposition, a transcript of which was provided to POLITICO, Perdue spoke at length about his role in Pillowtex’s collapse, which led to the loss of more than 7,600 jobs. Perdue was asked about his “experience with outsourcing,” and his response was blunt.
Yeah, I spent most of my career doing that,” Perdue said, according to the 186-page transcript of his sworn testimony.
The Georgia Republican then listed his career experience, much of which involved outsourcing.

A good part of the rest of the story involves Perdue and his campaign spot bobbing and weaving and explaining that “sourcing” doesn’t always mean “outsourcing” and that “outsourcing” isn’t always overseas, and this is just cherry-picking, and let’s blame the government for businesses shedding workers, bark bark woof woof. But the reality is that when you are defending your “outsourcing” record, you have lost at least half the argument, especially in a state currently leading the nation in unemployment.

A Hash Bash party at U-M Diag leads to arrests in Sept. 1973.

So, we’re not supposed to complain or dissent.  We’re supposed to just shut up and appreciate the appalling violations of our rights and destruction of our democracy.  Yesterday, Reince Preibus actually said that the  GOP Shuts Down Abortion Clinics because women ‘deserve compassion, respect’ and evidently forced birth no matter what the pregnant woman believes about the nature of life or the circumstances of the pregnancy.

NBC host Chuck Todd on Sunday pressed Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus about why his party opposed most regulations on business, except when it came to abortion clinics.

“One of the things is you don’t like a lot of regulations on business,” Todd noted during an interview on Meet the Press. “Except if the business is an abortion clinic.”

The NBC host pointed out that 80 percent of the clinics in Texas could be forced to close because of a strict Republican-backed anti-abortion law.

“Too much regulation, is that fair?” Todd wondered. “Why regulate on the abortion issue now [instead of waiting until] you win a fight in the Supreme Court and ban abortion altogether? Why restrict a business now in Texas?”

“The fact of the matter is we believe that any woman that’s faced with unplanned pregnancy deserves compassion, respect, counseling,” Priebus replied.

“But 80 percent of those clinics are gone,” Todd pressed. “So they have to drive for 2 or 300 miles. Is that compassion?”

Priebus, however, shot back that Republicans were most concerned with “whether you ought to use taxpayer money to fund abortion.”

“I mean, that’s the one issue that separates this conversation that we’re having,” he insisted, adding that the 2014 election would be decided on other issues.

“Obamacare, jobs, the economy, Keystone pipeline,” Priebus opined. “So you can try to steer — talk about abortion again, but the fact is of the matter is, if you’re in Skagway, Alaska, you’re thinking about the fact of why my life isn’t better off today than it was when this senator was elected six years ago.”

But the women in Skagway may also be concerned with the scarcity of reproductive services in their area. The nearest Planned Parenthood clinic is about 100 miles away in Juneau, but the trip takes over six hours because the route includes a five-hour ferry ride.

morty-jeanne-manford-1972-d1af71c54b419cd5803f30251d62031f2a4db4b3-s6-c30There are three SCOTUS justices over the age of 75 and one of them is Ruth Bader Ginsburg whose dissent from the tyranny of the majority has been an essential release to those of us that have had our rights destroyed.

Who do you think President Obama could appoint at this very day, given the boundaries that we have? If I resign any time this year, he could not successfully appoint anyone I would like to see in the court. [The Senate Republicans] took off the filibuster for lower federal court appointments, but it remains for this court. So anybody who thinks that if I step down, Obama could appoint someone like me, they’re misguided.

She knows how good she is and she is not afraid to judge others. (When Weisberg asks why the Court, while moving forward on gay rights, has swung in such a conservative direction on women’s rights, Ginsburg says, “To be frank, it’s one person who made the difference: Justice [Anthony] Kennedy.”) Given her profession, that’s as much as saying that she’s not afraid. And she is quite right: if she had resigned when the party-line worriers would have liked her to, one wouldn’t have her magnificent dissent in the Hobby Lobby case, or her matchless voice. That 1973 case was about whether the husbands of soldiers had to prove that they were economically dependent before getting benefits, while wives got them automatically. The Court’s jurisprudence on gender is something that Ginsburg has been building since then. And not only on gender: she, not John Roberts, deserves the credit for saving the Affordable Care Act. The Court is, no doubt, an extremely partisan institution. But that doesn’t mean that its members are just pegs to be traded. The Court is also an institution where seniority matters. There is no Ginsburg whom Ginsburg is holding back.

Do Democrats want to make sure that a President of their party is in office when Ginsburg leaves the Court? Then win the next election; battle it out, rather than fretting and sighing about how an older woman doesn’t know when it’s time to go. (Ginsburg is urged to be selfless a lot more loudly than is Stephen Breyer, who, at seventy-six, is only five years younger, and less of a presence.) If all this talk reflects sublimated doubt about the candidate that the Democrats look likely to field in 2016, then be open about that, and deal with it. Or make sure that the same constraints that—as Ginsburg quite correctly points out— the Republicans, even as a minority party in the Senate, place on Obama, are put on any Republican in the White House. As Dahlia Lithwick put it in a thorough dismantling of the Ginsburg-should-go nonsense, “It’s perverse in the extreme to seek to bench Ginsburg the fighter, simply because Senate Democrats are unwilling or unable to fight for the next Ginsburg.” (Lithwick adds, “I have seen not a lick of evidence that Ginsburg is failing…. If anything, Ginsburg has been stronger in recent years than ever.”)
But, the counter-argument goes, Obama could appoint a fifty-year-old Democrat—maybe not, to borrow Ginsburg’s phrase, “anyone I would like to see in the court,” but also not a Republican, and that would be enough. (That thinking helps explain why the President tried to name Michael Boggs to the federal bench, despite his anti-choice, anti-same-sex-marriage votes in the Georgia legislature; earlier this week, Democrats effectively killed his nomination.) Justices can be unpredictable: John Paul Stevens, admired by liberals, was appointed by Gerald Ford (and was on the Court until he was ninety). But this is clearly not a good moment to get anyone with ambitious positions—anyone interesting—through the Senate. Why seek it out? An exchange that requires the certain sacrifice of Ginsburg for the uncertainty of whomever Obama could get through is not even sensible in a coldly pragmatic way.

There is another reason why Ginsburg should be on the Court for this particular stretch of its history. In the Elle interview, Ginsburg speaks about the period after Sandra Day O’Connor, the only other woman on the Court at the time, retired (to take care of her dying husband). “When Sandra left, I was all alone,” she says.

I’m rather small, so when I go with all these men in this tiny room. Now Kagan is on my left, and Sotomayor is on my right. So we look like we’re really part of the court and we’re here to stay. Also, both of them are very active in oral arguments. They’re not shrinking violets. It’s very good for the schoolchildren who parade in and out of the court to see.

MAKERS_RightsProtest1969_tx800We have no guarantees these days other than enough votes gets these folks out of office.  We also know that there are entire channels that are supposed to be dedicated to news but are dedicated to propaganda and to getting angry, ignorant people  out to the polls.  They do so by using fear and lies.

Miles O’Brien, the science correspondent for PBS Newshour, lamented on Sunday that he was embarrassed at some of the coverage of Ebola on Fox News that had a “racial component,” and seemed intended to scare viewers.

On the Sunday edition of CNN’s Reliable Sources, host Brian Stelter looked back at the last week’s coverage of Ebola on Fox News. In one case, Fox News host Elisabeth Hasselbeck seemed almost disappointed when an expert downplayed the threat of the disease in the United States.

“We’ve heard the words ‘Ebola in America,’ a lot the past few days,” Stelter noted. “It’s technically true. There is a case of Ebola here in America. But to say Ebola is here, doesn’t that sort of inflame people’s fears?”
“It borders on irresponsibility when people get on television and start talking that way when they should know better,” O’Brien explained. “They should do their homework and they should report in a responsible manner.”

“Unfortunately, it’s a very competitive business, the business we’re in, and there is a perception that by hyping up this threat, you draw people’s attention,” he added. “That’s a shame to even say that and I get embarrassed for our brethren in journalism.”

Stelter also pointed to Fox News host Andrea Tantaros, who had warned viewers that West Africans might come to the U.S. infected with Ebola, and then go to a “witch doctor” instead of the hospital.

“We could digress into what motivated that and perhaps the racial component of all this, the arrogance, the first world versus third world statements and implications of just that,” O’Brien remarked. “It’s offensive on several levels and it reflects, frankly, a level of ignorance which we should not allow in our media and in our discourse.”

The success of these lies plays out in politics.  This vile human being votes and is active in politics.BwI6YDqIMAA9ksR

The  former general counsel and executive director of the South Carolina Republican Party is coming under fire for the novel solutions to the Ebola epidemic he is posting on Twitter.

The vehemently pro-life Todd Kincannon began by arguing that anyone who contracts Ebola should be summarily executed:

Today is the last day to register to vote for many states including Louisiana.  Please make sure you are registered and that you vote.  Encourage every one you know to vote.  It’s important.

People DIED so you could vote.   Don’t ever forget that.

What’s on your reading and blogging list today?


61 Comments on “Monday Reads: Why Voting Matters more than Ever”

  1. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Thanks for a terrific rant on the necessity of voting. Great post!

  2. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    It sounds like Chuck Todd thinks abortion is eventually going to be banned.

    “Too much regulation, is that fair?” Todd wondered. “Why regulate on the abortion issue now [instead of waiting until] you win a fight in the Supreme Court and ban abortion altogether? Why restrict a business now in Texas?”

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      I actually dared to watch the conversation. I can’t believe Priebus said public funds were being used. That’s a straight out lie. Hyde Amendment has barred that for decades.

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      Todd’s trying to save his butt cause people aren’t tuning in. So he hires a designer to make the setting look more like him. Has the little bitty coffee table, stacked with newspaper, no doubt from Jive Ass Jo, who sits at the Headhunter table, with Todd’s pouncing back and forth from the tables. Andrea is sitting next of JAJ, and she is shaking her head to everything JAJ says, and then she spews his working list. Meanwhile Gwen throws out her dice, and Axelrod gave JAJ a left hook, so to speak. And Todd says calm down, and that he is having a little fun. Todd doesn’t have to do his homework, he as much said so months ago.

  3. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    From The Guardian, the man who discovered the Ebola virus is worried.

    ‘In 1976 I discovered Ebola – now I fear an unimaginable tragedy’

    • gregoryp's avatar gregoryp says:

      That was a good read. It appears this major outbreak had its roots in poor Hospital hygiene. So sad.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Could the virus suddenly change itself such that it could be spread through the air?

      Like measles, you mean? Luckily that is extremely unlikely. But a mutation that would allow Ebola patients to live a couple of weeks longer is certainly possible and would be advantageous for the virus. But that would allow Ebola patients to infect many, many more people than is currently the case.

      But that is just speculation, isn’t it?

      Certainly. But it is just one of many possible ways the virus could change to spread itself more easily. And it is clear that the virus is mutating.

      But wait, wouldn’t that mean a bunch of policymakers would have to actually embrace EVOLUTION!

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Meanwhile, FOX News dictates response here in Louisiana and not our crippled Public Health System.

      Ebola scare empties BR police station near LSU

      http://theadvocate.com/news/10439802-123/ebola-scare-empties-br-police

      The freaked out over a man with dementia.

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      I’d like to see this article sent to every republican in office. Make them sign off that the read it page by page. Obama has asked for funding, and they gave him less than half what he asked for. (I think it was 88 million, and Hal Rogers agreed to 40 million.) Let’s send their families into the scare zones being created by this virus. Start with Governor Perry who has been the mouth piece convincing people to NOT trust our government. Both nurses and doctors had orders from CDC to prepare for Ebola, and I think they fell for the idiot that told them don’t trust the federal government. They screwed up but good. He and his republican buddies said it was those crossing the borders from Guatemala and Honduras bringing Ebola to our country. Now they are saying that Obama has failed to secure the borders from Ebola. IT’S OBAMA FAULT. Wonder which congressman/woman is willing to travel over there and help?

  4. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    NPR:

    Supreme Court Won’t Hear Gay Marriage Cases In New Term

    The Supreme Court’s new term will not include any cases that might decide the issue of same-sex marriage in the U.S., a development that comes after many lower and appeals courts have ruled against states’ bans on gay marriage. Advocates on both sides of the issue have been calling for the high court to review the issue and make an official ruling.

    The court’s refusal of all the petitions related to bans on gay marriage means that the appeals courts’ decisions allowing gay marriage can now take effect. They had been on hold pending a potential review by the Supreme Court.

  5. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Fiery post!

  6. Sweet Sue's avatar Sweet Sue says:

    Great post, Dak.
    The pressure on RBG to resign drives me to distraction.
    I don’t remember pressure on John Paul Stevens and he was older.
    I prayed every day for his health of mind and body, and I pray, today, for Ginsberg’s.

  7. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Men deserve everything women get: waiting periods, purity control and science-free sex education

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/06/men-women-waiting-periods-science-free-sex-education

    Stay away from the comments, though — too many men with no sense of humor.

  8. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    Republican Extremists Have Gone Too Far in Kansas: 7 On-the-Ground Developments
    It’s looking like voters may have had enough with extremists and their policies.

    http://www.alternet.org/election-2014/republican-extremists-have-gone-too-far-kansas-7-ground-developments?akid=12328.876742.mgCsww&rd=1&src=newsletter1021859&t=5

  9. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    Lawsuit: Cop Preaches Jesus During Traffic Stop, Hands Woman Church Pamphlet

    http://crooksandliars.com/2014/10/lawsuit-cop-preaches-christianity-during

  10. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    The New York Times ‏@nytimes 13s13 seconds ago
    The NYT obituary for Jerrie Mock, the first solo female pilot to circumnavigate the globe http://nyti.ms/1pH9ieu

  11. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    “fetuses get lawyers” law in Alabama. | Reproductive Hlth Servs v. Strange | #RHRCData http://bit.ly/1s3ZBNi

    http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/10/alabama-abortion-law-attorney-fetus-lawyers

  12. dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

    Just talked to my sister. She doesn’t think my Dad’s going to make it very long.

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      I’m sorry to hear this message. Anything we can do, please let us know.

    • Sweet Sue's avatar Sweet Sue says:

      I’m terribly sorry.

    • Beata's avatar Beata says:

      Very sad to hear this, Dak. Even when you know it is inevitable, it is so difficult to lose a parent. I hope he will pass peacefully.

    • janicen's avatar janicen says:

      I’m very sorry to hear this sad news, dak.

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Thanks. It’s rough even though I knew it was coming. He’s been getting progressively worse the last few months. He really can’t speak now and he’s quite weak so I know that at this point it’s better if he passes but I still really miss him and will miss knowing I can’t just pick up the phone and talk to him. I’m just really sad.

      • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

        If you didn’t have a good heart you wouldn’t feel this way.

        My father died around this time of year almost 10 years ago. I still think more about him at this time of year. And a close relative, older, died just last week. I keep inching closer to equanimity about death, but it’s just hard.

        • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

          It is hard. I still think of my Dad just about every day, and he has been gone for more than four years.

      • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

        I’m so sorry, Dakinikat. From all you have told me, your dad is a good man. He has had a long, happy, successful life, but it’s never easy to say goodbye. Take care.

        • minkoffminx's avatar JJ Lopez Minkoff says:

          Yes Kat, if there is anything I can do…I am so sorry…this is heartbreaking news. Love you.

  13. Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

    Dak, I am trying to weigh in on the Hewlett Packard Split. I know that the state of Idaho list HP as number 3 or 4 as those among the top employers in the state (Micron, St. Luke’s Hospital, HP, Simplot, Albertson’s and Boise State University. How well I remember Meg Whitman running for Governor in California, and Carly Fiorina (ran for senate) both lost. They both ran on creating jobs. 5,000 plus will be laid off because of this split. Of course, stock were up 6% today. Shareholders are loving, and because they get grabs on both businesses through a tax free transaction in 2015. They are all bandits. Why are they tax free.

    I can only guess what Meg will get out of the deal. I read that she lost 50,000 jobs in the last two years. I see that the HP empire got there start in Palo Alto, Ca. They are “extracting” wealth from Houston, Texas, Columbia, Switzerland, Paris, and Singapore. In the states they have a funnel into Boise, Fort Collins, Austin, and Roseville, Ca. These are the people who do not see real people. They are flying around in private jets, limos, and staying at the best hotels, they aren’t really creating jobs. They don’t really see REAL people do they?

  14. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    In the first known transmission of the outbreak of Ebola outside West Africa, a Spanish nurse who treated a missionary for the disease at a Madrid hospital has tested positive for the virus, Spain’s health minister said Monday.

    The female nurse was part of the medical team that cared for a 69-year-old Spanish priest who died Sept. 25 in a Madrid hospital designated for treating Ebola patients after he was flown home from Sierra Leone, where he served as the medical director of a hospital there treating infected Ebola patients, Health Minister Ana Mato said. ….

    Spanish authorities said they were investigating how the nurse became infected at a hospital with modern health care facilities and special equipment for handling cases of deadly viruses. The virus that causes Ebola spreads only through direct contact with the bodily fluids of an infected person showing symptoms.

    • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

      Health authorities said on Monday night that the nurse was in stable condition. She had alerted them to a slight fever on 30 September, said Antonio Alemany from the regional government of Madrid, and checked into a hospital in Alcorcón with a high fever on Sunday. Ebola protocol was immediately activated at the hospital and initial and secondary tests were both positive for the virus.

      The patient, who is married with no children, was on holiday when she began showing symptoms, said Alemany. “We’re drawing up a list of all the people she may have been in contact with, including with health professionals at the Alcorcón hospital where she is being treated,” he added, estimating that more than 30 people were being carefully monitored for any sign of symptoms. ….

      …Americans have 10 hospitals with the highest level of biosafety possible. Spain, in contrast, has just one suitable hospital with biosafety levels that are much lower.

      Health authorities on Monday said that health professionals treating Ebola patients in Spain always followed protocols outlined by the World Health Organisation. The nurse would have entered García Viejo’s room just twice, said Alemany, and would have been wearing protective equipment on both occasions. “We don’t know yet what failed,” said Alemany. “We’re investigating the mechanism of infection.”

      http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/06/nurse-spain-tests-positive-ebola

    • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat says:

      Wow. I heard we have 13 hospitals that can handle the protocol. Hope the nurses get all the needed training and equipment.

      • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

        Health professionals in Madrid have blamed substandard equipment and a failure to follow protocol for the first case of Ebola to be contracted outside west Africa.

        …. Staff at the hospital where she worked told El País that the protective suits they were given did not meet World Health Organisation (WHO) standards, which specify that suits must be impermeable and include breathing apparatus. Staff also pointed to latex gloves secured with adhesive tape as an example of how the suits were not impermeable and noted that they did not have their own breathing equipment.
        ….
        El Mundo reported that it was the nurse who asked to be tested for Ebola, having to insist repeatedly on being tested before it was done on Monday.

        http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/oct/07/ebola-crisis-substandard-equipment-nurse-positive-spain