EBOLA Was Dr. Martin Salia who just Died from Ebola in the USA just another Lab Rat?

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
Was Dr. Martin Salia who just Died from Ebola in the USA just another Lab Rat?

by John Galt
November 17, 2014 20:00 ET



LAB_RAT_tn-150x150.jpg


From Breitbart News and WOWT Channel 6 Omaha, NE:


(click on the title link to watch the news video on Dr. Salia's passing)


It is sad fact that this man died. But the disturbing part of this outbreak appears to now have started courtesy of the United States Government and its CDC. This individual was too far gone according to previous media reports for the transport and current regimen of treatments available to save him. Yet the United States government spent close to a million dollars (if not more) to fly this Sierra Leone national to Omaha, Nebraska for what?


Logically speaking there was no humanitarian effort behind this so the only logical conclusion is to assume that the American scientific community and bureaucracy are treating current US based patients and selected African victims of Ebola just as they are treating our soldiers currently being deployed there:


As lab rats to find suitable treatments for when the outbreak becomes widespread and beyond containment within the United States and Europe.


If any fool thinks our military can do anything to help those poor souls other than shoot the sick and burn the villages, then you are a fool. The truth is that containment has failed so now as the disease mutates, the secondary protocol is to attempt to find treatments which save the patient at various levels of infection. Dr. Salia appears to be the first patient in latter stages of infection of whom they attempted to save inside the US instead of flying there and attempting the treatments on site.


This story should disturb the average American but I know, there are more important things happening which keep the sheeple distracted. I guess when their own children, parents or pets become the lab rats they might care.


In the mean time….


LOOK! IT’S KIM’S BUTT!
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
We only have a small sample size. But it's amazing that every white person who was treated for Ebola in America has lived. But every black person has died.

Not ready to jump on the race targeted lab created disease bandwagon yet. But I'm paying more attention to it.
 

marymonde

Veteran Member
We only have a small sample size. But it's amazing that every white person who was treated for Ebola in America has lived. But every black person has died.

Not ready to jump on the race targeted lab created disease bandwagon yet. But I'm paying more attention to it.

Frank Zappa believed that the US was creating viruses that would attack certain races and ethnic groups. That was back in the '80's. Something to ponder.
 

Cyndryn

4 8 15 16 23 42
We only have a small sample size. But it's amazing that every white person who was treated for Ebola in America has lived. But every black person has died.

Not ready to jump on the race targeted lab created disease bandwagon yet. But I'm paying more attention to it.

Interesting course of thought...In researching blood types (amateurly, not professionally) I've read how the different blood types evolved and affect us as humans. Type A blood types while susceptible to more diseases such as cancer and heart disease seem to have much higher defense against viruses or contagions contracted from others in densely populated communities. 'O' types on the other hand are more resilient against the biological mutation type diseases but seem to have little resistance against viruses. 'A' types are generally equated with people of European origin, most people native to Africa are predominantly O types. I'm curious if whether the ability to fight off the virus has something to do with something as basic as a blood type. I have zero scientific fact to back this up personally, basis is strictly from reading I've done on my own. Something I have thought about often since this virus has been writing history among humankind.
 

Ben Sunday

Deceased
All I had heard about the late Doctor was that while in Africa, he was considered THE premier surgeon in the nation of Sierra Leone.

CBS Radio Network...1pm, Monday, 11/17...fwiw.
 

SAPPHIRE

Veteran Member
I thought the same thing, John..............they need his corpse for "answers to their experiment"...........disgusting evil.............
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Two things:

1. I read somewhere (here) that this doctor covered the cost of his transportation. Not in those words exactly, but implying it.

2. Weren't our troops going to build a hospital THERE specifically to treat doctors and nurses? If I recall correctly, it was to have been the first hospital they built, and I think I read that they already built one. If they did, then why wasn't this doctor treated there?

If he was so critically ill prior to coming here, then IMHO, the only reason they would have tried to treat him here would have been experimental.
 

Petunia

Veteran Member
We only have a small sample size. But it's amazing that every white person who was treated for Ebola in America has lived. But every black person has died.

Not ready to jump on the race targeted lab created disease bandwagon yet. But I'm paying more attention to it.

IIRC Nurse Vinson was not white. And Nurse Pham also.
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Text only copy/paste states patient would pay for transportation.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2014/nov/14/surgeon-with-ebola-coming-to-us-for-care/

Neb. hospital to receive Ebola-stricken doctor from Sierra Leone

FREETOWN, Sierra Leone — A surgeon working in Sierra Leone has been diagnosed with Ebola and will be flown Saturday to the United States for treatment, officials from Sierra Leone and the United States said.

Dr. Martin Salia was to be taken to Omaha to be treated at the Nebraska Medical Center, Sierra Leone’s chief medical officer, Dr. Brima Kargbo, told The Associated Press on Friday. Salia reportedly lives in Maryland.

Salia is a general surgeon who had been working at Kissy United Methodist Hospital in the Sierra Leone capital of Freetown. Patients, including mothers who hours earlier had given birth, fled from the 60-bed hospital after news of the Ebola case emerged, United Methodist News reported.

The hospital was closed on Tuesday after Salia tested positive and he was taken to the Hastings Ebola Treatment Center near Freetown, the church news service said. Kissy hospital staffers will be quarantined for 21 days.

A Sierra Leone citizen, the 44-year-old lives in Maryland and is a permanent U.S. resident, according to a person in the United States with direct knowledge of the situation. The person was not authorized to release the information and spoke on condition of anonymity.

Salia received his surgical training from a group called the Pan African Academy of Christian Surgeons, which seeks to train African doctors on a level comparable to training they would receive in the U.S., said Richard Toupin, of Auburn, Indiana, a fellow medical missionary.


“He is one of the best-trained surgeons in his country,” Toupin said. “He is a very competent surgeon.”

Jeff Bleijerveld, director of global ministries for the United Brethren in Christ church, said he last talked to Salia in February 2013, when they met to discuss planning for a hospital in the southern part of Sierra Leone. He recalled watching Salia perform a hernia surgery on a young boy, assisted by a handyman who was not actually a doctor. He recalled Salia leading the surgical team in prayer before the operation.

The United Brethren played an early role in Salia’s medical training.

“He’s a quiet leader,” Bleijerveld said. “Our people still have a real affection for him.”

The doctor will be the third Ebola patient at the Omaha hospital and the 10th person with Ebola to be treated in the U.S. The last, Dr. Craig Spencer, was released from a New York hospital on Tuesday.

The Nebraska Medical Center said Thursday it had no official confirmation that it would be treating another patient, but that an Ebola patient in Sierra Leone would be evaluated for possible transport to the hospital. The patient would arrive Saturday afternoon.

Salia came down with symptoms of Ebola on Nov. 6 but test results were negative for the deadly virus. He was tested again on Monday, and he tested positive. Salia is in stable condition at an Ebola treatment center in Freetown. It wasn’t clear whether he had been involved in the care of Ebola patients.

Kissy is not an Ebola treatment unit but Salia worked at at least three other medical facilities, United Methodist News said, citing health ministry sources.

The U.S. State Department said it was helping facilitate the transfer of Salia; the U.S. Embassy in Freetown said he was paying for the expensive evacuation.The travel costs and care of other Ebola patients flown to the U.S. were covered by the groups they worked for in West Africa.

Story Continues →

Page 2 of 2
Continued from page 1

Sierra Leone is one of the three West Africa nations hit hard by an Ebola epidemic this year. Five other doctors in Sierra Leone have contracted Ebola - and all have died.

The disease has killed more than 5,000 people in West Africa, mostly in Sierra Leona, Guinea and Liberia.

The hospital in Omaha is one of four U.S. hospitals with specialized treatment units for people with highly dangerous infectious diseases. It was chosen for the latest patient because workers at units at Atlanta’s Emory University Hospital and the National Institutes of Health near Washington are still in a 21-day monitoring period.

Those two hospitals treated two Dallas nurses who were infected while caring for Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man who fell ill with Ebola shortly after arriving in the U.S. and later died.

The other eight Ebola patients in the U.S. recovered, including the nurses. Five were American aid workers who became infected in West Africa while helping care for patients there; one was a video journalist.
 

Trouble

Veteran Member
We only have a small sample size. But it's amazing that every white person who was treated for Ebola in America has lived. But every black person has died.

Not ready to jump on the race targeted lab created disease bandwagon yet. But I'm paying more attention to it.
Its just a shame it hasn't been perfected yet...
 

kittyknits

Veteran Member
Interesting course of thought...In researching blood types (amateurly, not professionally) I've read how the different blood types evolved and affect us as humans. Type A blood types while susceptible to more diseases such as cancer and heart disease seem to have much higher defense against viruses or contagions contracted from others in densely populated communities. 'O' types on the other hand are more resilient against the biological mutation type diseases but seem to have little resistance against viruses. 'A' types are generally equated with people of European origin, most people native to Africa are predominantly O types. I'm curious if whether the ability to fight off the virus has something to do with something as basic as a blood type. I have zero scientific fact to back this up personally, basis is strictly from reading I've done on my own. Something I have thought about often since this virus has been writing history among humankind.

I recently read something about mannose-binding lectin, a lectin that is supposedly instrumental in innate immunity. I tried to research it, but didn't get very far because I don't understand this kind of stuff. Evidently you either have it or you don't and it's not something you get from food.

People who have naturally high levels of it rarely get sick from anything, and vice-versa.

To me personally, I thought this might be a clue as to why my husband's family is so incredibly healthy inspite of eating mostly crappy food all the time and chronic heavy drinking on the part of many of them.

TIFWIW.
 

Faroe

Un-spun
IMHO, much too small a sample size to draw any conclusions. Furhthermore, Vinson was black.

Duncan would have had a much better chance if he had been honest with the hospital the first time he showed up. From what I can tell, catching it early seems to be the key.
 
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