Why Ebola triggers massive right-wing hysteria

KingOrfeo

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From AlterNet:

AlterNet / By Amanda Marcotte

Inside the Bizarre Right-Wing Panic over Ebola Virus Coming to the US

The conservative mindset is tailor-made for opportunities for paranoia and isolation.


October 7, 2014 |

Of all the issues that you would think would by non-partisan, ebola should be at the top of the list. The disease is just a mindless germ that doesn’t check your race, gender, social class, sexual orientation or party identification before it strikes, suggesting both liberals and conservatives have a stake in treating people exposed to the disease with compassion and care. And yet, to flip on Fox News or turn on any conservative media at all, you’d think that ebola was some kind of plague designed by the Democratic party in order to wipe out Republicans.

Blowing the threat of ebola out of proportion and trying to link it to Obama has been a constant theme on the right in recent days. Elisabeth Hasselbeck of Fox News literally demanded that we put the country on lockdown, banning all travel in and out. In a bit of race-baiting, Andrea Tantaros of Fox suggested that people who travel to the country and show symptoms of ebola will “seek treatment from a witch doctor” instead of go to the hospital. Fox host Steve Doocy suggested the CDC is lying about ebola because they’re “part of the administration”. Fox also promoted a conspiracy theorist who is trying to claim the CDC is lying when they caution people not to panic.

Other right wing media joined in. Tammy Bruce blamed ebola on the “Obama legacy”. Laura Ingraham said Obama was prevented from doing more to stop the disease because of his “core ties to the African continent”. Rush Limbaugh even went as far as to accuse Obama of letting the disease spread because he supposes liberals believe “we kind of deserve a little bit of this”.

Even politicians are getting in on the act. Former South Carolina Republican Party executive director Todd Kincannon tweeted, “The protocol for a positive Ebola test should be immediate humane execution and sanitization of the whole area.” Republican presidential hopefuls stopped short of wishing death on people who have the disease, but are nonetheless crawling all over each other to make a bigger deal out of ebola than it really is. Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, Paul Ryan and Bobby Jindal have all suggested that we ban travel in and out of the country, at least some travel, in order to keep a lid on ebola.

None of this is even in the realm of reasonable, of course. There’s only been one case of ebola in the entire country and the CDC has a well-practiced strategy for tracking and containing the disease. PBS science correspondent Miles O'Brien denounced the coverage as “irresponsible” and asked people to “take a deep breath” before fear-mongering about ebola.

With the threat being so small, why are conservatives going crazy like this? Part of it is pure political opportunism, trying to hitch their anti-Obama obsession to whatever scary news story is making headlines. Part of it is cynical fear-mongering for its own sake, as conservative pundits know that when people are afraid, the are more open to reactionary ideas. But a large part of it might be that conservatives are just far more prone than liberals are both to getting wound up over the fear of disease and being compelled by the idea that people who are not themselves are undeserving of care.

Researcher Jonathan Haidt is the architect of the “moral foundations” theory that suggests that political inclinations, at least in modern times, are rooted in five different foundations: harm, fairness, ingroup, authority, and purity. Liberals and conservatives weigh these five considerations very differently. For instance, liberals are more likely than conservatives to factor in whether an action causes harm when deciding if it’s wrong or not. Liberals also worry more about fairness and have more regard for people that are outside of their “group” than conservatives. Conservatives, on the other hand, put far more trust in authority. Conservatives are also far more obsessed with “purity” and far more likely to get hung up on the idea that the body “is a temple which can be desecrated by immoral activities and contaminants,” as Haidt explains.

You can see these differences play out with the response to ebola. For liberals, the proper response to ebola patients is to reduce harm by caring for them and to treat the people who got it fairly, by understanding that they didn’t do anything wrong to get it.

But ebola touches, for conservatives, two big, red buttons. First, it’s a disease, so of course it’s going to set off the fears of contamination that Haidt demonstrates plague conservatives far more than liberals. Second of all, conservatives associate ebola with people who are different from them---from different countries, often of different races---and they have little regard for people in “out groups”, which is Haidt’s term for people who are different. And because conservatives are less worried about harming others or being fair, it becomes easy for them to demonize people with ebola, demand that they be left to die without care, and simply kept from “contaminating” the rest of us.

You see this tension with many other issues. Abortion? Conservatives are grossed out by women who gave up their “purity” by having sex, but liberals are more worried about the harm done women who lose abortion rights. Gay rights? Conservatives see gays as impure and different, but liberals are worried about treating them fairly. Ferguson protests and the Mike Brown shooting? Conservatives love authority and support the police, especially against black protesters that are seen as an “out” group. Liberals worry about the harm done to Brown and the protesters and are angry about the unfairness of a policeman shooting an unarmed man or attacking unarmed protesters. Indeed, the ebola panic quite resembles the way many conservatives reacted in the early days of AIDS, demonizing sufferers as disgusting people who should be isolated and left to die.

Once you know these patterns, the conservative reaction to ebola---to panic, to treat the people who have it like pariahs, to demand that we shut off all contact with outsiders, and to even reject the idea of caring for the afflicted---was entirely predictable. Even if they didn’t have cynical political motivations, which many clearly do, their worldview makes it nearly impossible for them to react with compassion instead of fear.
 
teh ebola:
reds: "scientists and professionals all say it's dangerous and deadly!"
blues: "pffft, whatever. you're hysterical"

teh global climate meltdown:
blues: "scientists and professionals all say it's dangerous and deadly!"
reds: "pffft, whatever. you're hysterical"
 
teh ebola:
reds: "scientists and professionals all say it's dangerous and deadly!"
blues: "pffft, whatever. you're hysterical"

teh global climate meltdown:
blues: "scientists and professionals all say it's dangerous and deadly!"
reds: "pffft, whatever. you're hysterical"

Nailed it.
 
teh ebola:
reds: "scientists and professionals all say it's dangerous and deadly!"

But, they also say they've got it under control here.

None of this is even in the realm of reasonable, of course. There’s only been one case of ebola in the entire country and the CDC has a well-practiced strategy for tracking and containing the disease. PBS science correspondent Miles O'Brien denounced the coverage as “irresponsible” and asked people to “take a deep breath” before fear-mongering about ebola.
 
This is not just about right-wing hysteria. It should be about common fucking sense hysteria. Ebola is not the common cold. It can liquify your organs and cause you to bleed from all of your orifices. We should have restricted travel to and from the hot zone almost immediately. Since the U.S. is not doing that they should be closely inspecting passports for anyone that been to a hot zone and is trying to get back into the U.S.

For example, the guy from Texas that died recently went from the hot zone, to Brussels, and then to the United States. He should have been held up in Brussels after inspecting his passport. He should have been denied entry for 21 days to prove that he was not infected before being allowed to continue his trip back to the United States.

Ebola could be the 21-century equivalent of the Spanish Flu. That killed 20-40 million people between 1918-1919.
 
Ebola shouldn't be a partisan thing, right? But, it looks like the Democrats are trying to make it one. Or at least use people's Ebola fears to boast their agenda.

Appearing on ABC's This Week with George Stephanopoulos, former Obama official Van Jones posed that the Democrats should use Ebola in their midterm politicking.
He said:


Read more at http://freedomoutpost.com/2014/10/t...ms-use-ebola-panic-favor/#XOvGLXPKypriM1JH.99



Van Jones is Right Wing? Who knew???
 
AlterNet, a project of the non-profit Independent Media Institute, is a progressive/liberal activist news service. Launched in 1998, AlterNet claims a readership of over 3 million visitors per month, though the web ratings service Quantcast estimates that it receives 1.3 million.



The King of Oreo's reads some odd stuff. Apparently the website he quotes lies just like his King Obama.
 
This is not just about right-wing hysteria. It should be about common fucking sense hysteria. Ebola is not the common cold.

No, it isn't; it is much less contagious. You don't get it if a patient breathes in your direction, you have to actually touch their bodily fluids. That makes it much easier to contain.
 
From Salon:

Thursday, Oct 9, 2014 02:00 PM EDT

Republicans are Ebola hypocrites: What they really think of public health

Republicans slash public health funding -- then blame Obama for the crisis? Here's why he needs to call them out

Joan Walsh


President Obama’s critics are right: He never should have reassured Americans that Ebola was “unlikely” to arrive in the U.S. He should have known better. He ought to have told Americans that our still spotty healthcare system, in which hospitals routinely deny diligent treatment to people who don’t have insurance, and profile along lines of race and class, virtually insures that we’ll have an inadequate response to any public health crisis.

Thomas Eric Duncan, the first person to develop Ebola in the U.S. – four other people are being treated in American hospitals – is the only patient to die of the disease here. He’s also the only patient who was uninsured. He turned up in a Dallas emergency room, informed the staff he was from Liberia, and was sent home with antibiotics.

Even when he was readmitted and diagnosed with Ebola, he got an experimental drug late. And he was the only patient who didn’t receive the additional experimental protocol of a blood transfusion from someone who had recovered from Ebola.

“The real elephant in the room is, the man was black, he had no insurance, and therefore he was basically turned away,” Dallas County Commissioner John Wiley Price, who is African American, told the Los Angeles Times. The hospital, for its part, denies it treated Duncan differently than insured patients.

It’s probably no accident, either, that it happened in Rick Perry’s Texas. More than 1.5 million Texans, with a median income of $833, are going uninsured because Perry rejected Medicaid funding. Medicaid wouldn’t have helped Duncan, but it might help someone exposed to him. Right now Youngor Jallah, the woman who got Duncan to the hospital when his symptoms worsened, says she doesn’t have Medicaid or any health insurance.

Presumably she’s being monitored by health officials and will be treated if she becomes symptomatic, but she’s not certain. “It’s my worry … that I will be treated the same way” as Duncan, Jallah told the Los Angeles Times.

State public health officials also warn that Texas isn’t prepared for a public health emergency. “We don’t really have a unifying construct for public health in Texas that’s comprehensive,” Dr. Eduardo Sanchez, the former commissioner of the Texas Department of State Health Services, told the Texas Tribune. Between 2008 and 2013, 36 percent of local health departments in Texas had to lay off staff due to budget cuts between 2008 and 2013.

It’s also worth remembering that Perry’s indictment has to do with concerns that he abused his power by trying to defund the Travis County District Attorney’s office after it opened an investigation into corruption in the state’s Cancer Prevention and Research Institute, when an official was indicted for misusing an $11 million grant. Not a great sign that Perry is managing medical research money as well as he might. At any rate, it’s ridiculous that Perry is now giving the president lectures about his handling of a health crisis that broke out in Perry’s own state.

Then there’s the GOP crusade to cut federal spending on health agencies. The sequester cut $1.55 billion from the budget of the National Institute of Health, took another $300 million from the Center for Disease Control, slashed global health programs by $411 million and USAID by $289 million. The budgets drawn up by Rep. Paul Ryan and passed by the House GOP would have deepened those cuts significantly. The CDC’s budget has been cut $600 million since 2010.

“I have to tell you honestly it’s been a significant impact on us,” the NIH’s Anthony Fauci told a Senate subcommittee last week. “It has both in an acute and a chronic, insidious way eroded our ability to respond in the way that I and my colleagues would like to see us be able to respond to these emerging threats.”

So the president’s critics are right, though mostly for the wrong reasons. Our under-funded public health system means that Obama probably shouldn’t have called it “unlikely” that Ebola would reach our shores, or promise that we can certainly prevent its spread. “We have to work now so that this is not the world’s next AIDS,” CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden told the World Bank and International Monetary Fund annual meeting. That will require funding a stronger public health infrastructure at home and internationally.

But Republicans are determined to use the disease to stoke fear and turn out their base in November. It may be working: An NBC online poll shows that 56 percent of Americans now want a ban on flights from countries that have seen an outbreak of Ebola. Fighting the disease will require engaging with the global public health community, not seceding from it, but xenophobia is a reliable standby in the GOP political toolkit. It just may be the wrong season to expect a serious bipartisan response to this crisis.
 
No, it isn't; it is much less contagious. You don't get it if a patient breathes in your direction, you have to actually touch their bodily fluids. That makes it much easier to contain.

There are trained doctors that knew all the risks and took all the proper precautions that still managed to get infected.

Also, a sneeze can spread bodily fluids into an aerosolized form from 5 to 200 feet in the air. Here's a link for details. It's probably easier to infect an entire plane of passengers due to the tight quarters.

http://www.slate.com/articles/video..._shows_sneezes_can_travel_up_to_200_feet.html

And I reiterate that this is not a common virus. It has a fatality rate between 25-90% depending on where you live and how far along it has infected you.

I would prefer that our government be overly concerned and protective about the situation than what they are currently doing.

FYI, I lean Libertarian.
 
Last edited:
Ebola appears to have originated in Africa.
Africa is the home of #ThosePeople
Hence, conservative fear and anger.
 
We have AlterNet
We have Salon.


The oreo King should be posting an article from Huffington Post or DailyKos any second now.
 
Ebola shouldn't be a partisan thing, right? But, it looks like the Democrats are trying to make it one. Or at least use people's Ebola fears to boast their agenda.

Appearing on ABC's This Week with George Stephanopoulos, former Obama official Van Jones posed that the Democrats should use Ebola in their midterm politicking.
He said:


Read more at http://freedomoutpost.com/2014/10/t...ms-use-ebola-panic-favor/#XOvGLXPKypriM1JH.99



Van Jones is Right Wing? Who knew???


van jones is an utter moron.
he was the idiot behind obama's election promises of "green jobs" despite having almost no experience in that field.

net green jobs: 0
 
Ebola is just nicer name. I remember when they called it Hemorrhagic fever and people would shit. Hysteria is not called for but being on RED alert is appropriate. If that shit mutates like viruses like to do and becomes air born it could be like the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918.
 
van jones is an utter moron.
he was the idiot behind obama's election promises of "green jobs" despite having almost no experience in that field.

net green jobs: 0

Van Jones has not been associated with the Obama administration for over 4 years. I'm not sure how anything the guy has to say is relevant in 2014, but whatever.
 
van jones is an utter moron.
he was the idiot behind obama's election promises of "green jobs" despite having almost no experience in that field.

net green jobs: 0


But the oreo King said it was all Right Wing. Are you saying he's working his own mind into hysteria?
 
But the oreo King said it was all Right Wing. Are you saying he's working his own mind into hysteria?

It's called "balance fallacy", Amber. The ratio of Conservitard to RealAmerican™ criticism can be 99-1, but as long as there's at least one critic from the RealAmerican™ side, #Derpettes like you will squeal in delight "See? See? Both sides!"

#AmberWavesOfDerp
 
This is not just about right-wing hysteria. It should be about common fucking sense hysteria. Ebola is not the common cold. It can liquify your organs and cause you to bleed from all of your orifices. We should have restricted travel to and from the hot zone almost immediately. Since the U.S. is not doing that they should be closely inspecting passports for anyone that been to a hot zone and is trying to get back into the U.S.

For example, the guy from Texas that died recently went from the hot zone, to Brussels, and then to the United States. He should have been held up in Brussels after inspecting his passport. He should have been denied entry for 21 days to prove that he was not infected before being allowed to continue his trip back to the United States.

Ebola could be the 21-century equivalent of the Spanish Flu. That killed 20-40 million people between 1918-1919.

Stop talking sense. It's confusing.
 
Ebola is just nicer name. I remember when they called it Hemorrhagic fever and people would shit. Hysteria is not called for but being on RED alert is appropriate. If that shit mutates like viruses like to do and becomes air born it could be like the Spanish flu pandemic of 1918.


Ebola is a type of hemorrhagic fever, but not all hemorrhagic fevers are Ebola.
 
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