Never let facts get in the way of a good panic. Although there have been just three confirmed cases of Ebola in the United States — at least one of which appears to have been caused more by negligence than anything else — the great American Ebola hysteria of 2014 is now in full swing. And people with large megaphones are doing their best to ensure it continues indefinitely.
Perhaps the greatest source of unnecessary terror is Capitol Hill. For months, members of Congress have been insisting that immigrants threaten to carry Ebola across American borders and infect citizens. On Thursday, shortly before a House hearing on the U.S. government’s response to the Ebola crisis, a number of Republican members of Congress insisted that the government institute new travel restrictions to stem the tide.
The president should absolutely consider a temporary ban on travel to the U.S. from countries afflicted with #Ebola → http://t.co/6sYpvtfxvU
— Speaker John Boehner (@SpeakerBoehner) October 16, 2014
#Ebola flights must be banned and no fly lists created. Quarantine citizens returning.
— Steve King (@SteveKingIA) October 16, 2014
Center for Disease Control (CDC) director Thomas Frieden told the House on Thursday that his agency has not entirely ruled out travel restrictions, although for now the administration has no plans to implement one. Frieden’s position has long been that any travel restrictions would make it harder for medical supplies and personnel to reach the parts of Africa afflicted by the Ebola epidemic, thereby prolonging the crisis.
Not everyone’s stopping at rhetoric about travel restrictions. Sen. Rand Paul, (R-Ky.), recently wondered aloud about the possibility of a “worldwide pandemic.” On Wednesday, a journalist at that website called on the Pentagon to carry out a military coup against President Obama and then implement a travel ban.
THE PENTAGON MUST ACT NOW. Either they remove Obama and implement a travel ban or millions of Americans die. #ebola #coup
— Patrick Dollard (@PatDollard) October 15, 2014
On Fox News Radio, psychiatrist and Fox News contributor Keith Ablow theorized on Wednesday that President Obama didn’t want to institute a travel ban and prevent Ebola from reaching American shores because he believes that “we [Americans] are bad people.” Later that day, former Fox News host Glenn Beck appeared on the network’s The O’Reilly Factor and implied that the president is deliberately ignoring a burgeoning Ebola emergency in Dallas, Texas because of the city’s conservative political leanings.









