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Health/Medical Title: Bill Gates Tells The World: Get Ready For The Next Epidemic "An epidemic is one of the few catastrophes that could set the world back drastically in the next few decades," Bill Gates warns in a essay he wrote for the March 18 edition of The New England Journal of Medicine. In the article, entitled "The Next Epidemic Lessons From Ebola" he says that the Ebola epidemic is a "wake-up call." "Because there was so little preparation, the world lost time ... trying to answer basic questions about containing Ebola," writes Gates (whose Gates Foundation is a supporter of NPR). That's why, he continues, that "the world needs a global warning and response system for outbreaks." And part of that system must be a better way to get supplies and "trained personnel" to the scene, where they can work with local efforts. Nobody can argue with that goal. But there's a lot of debate around how to execute his proposal. For example, some global health gurus aren't so sure we need to create a response system. Maybe we already have one. Look at the response to the 2013 typhoon in the Philippines, says Dr. Bruce Aylward, assistant director general for emergencies at the World Health Organization. "Within two weeks, we had 151 foreign medical teams on the ground." The response wasn't so fast when Ebola struck West Africa. Actually, many agencies agree with Gates that it was way too slow. And the question is why. It wasn't that there weren't enough volunteers, Aylward says. Rather, the volunteers needed to know what would happen if they were to contract Ebola. And there weren't reassuring answers early in the epidemic. "There was no way anyone could guarantee the right of medical evacuation for people affected by Ebola," he says. So for any future force of emergency health workers, it's critical to offer what Aylward calls "duty of care" the ability to ensure the needs of aid workers can be met if anything were to happen, in terms of their health, security or safety. Then there are questions about whether flying in outsiders is the best solution. "I'm going to speak frankly," says Emmanuel d'Harcourt, senior health director of the International Rescue Committee. "While there's probably some value in the margin [of a global response system], it's not the heart of the issue, and it has the potential to distract us from the real issues." Which are? "Local preparedness and local response," d'Harcourt says. "We know that in most disasters, not just epidemics, but all kinds of disasters, the people who are able to respond the earliest are local. If you have local preparedness, you don't really get a major epidemic at all." A team on the ground has another advantage, he says: They know the terrain. After the Pakistan earthquake in 2005, the response from IRC didn't involve "flying people in from all over the world." A team in Pakistan that had been serving Afghan refugees for a couple decades were there in less than 24 hours," d'Harcourt says. They knew how to provide health care and basic needs, such as shelter "in a culturally appropriate way." And it's easier for disaster victims to trust their fellow countrymen. In the early months of the Ebola outbreak, the citizens of West Africa often believed that the virus was part of a conspiracy that Western doctors were making patients sick. Those rumors made many people reluctant to seek treatment. To debunk that kind of thinking, d'Harcourt says, you need fellow citizens who can say, "I know you think it's a plot, but here's why I don't think it's a plot." D'Harcourt also believes that the idea of a rescue mission "infantilizes" people, treats them like children awaiting salvation. "You know, nobody, not even children, likes to be treated like children," he says. "I say this as a pediatrician. Children are always asking for more responsibility, more autonomy." A textbook example of how a person native to a country can help, he says, is the story of Alpha Tamba, a Liberian physician's assistant. During the Ebola crisis, Tamba went to villages in hard-hit Lofa County and said to the villagers, this is what I can do "what can you do?" For example, he provided the chlorine and buckets for hand washing, but the villagers set up their own quarantines. When outsiders impose quarantines, d'Harcourt says, that doesn't always work out. Of course, outsiders can, as Gates writes, play a critical role in quashing any future outbreak. But they have to have the right mindset and even the right garb. If workers come in with white helmets, says Dr. Joanne Liu, international president of Doctors Without Borders, "it gives them a sort of a militarized label. In my organization, we do not feel comfortable with the idea that there are blurred lines of humanitarian aid and military action." She also stresses that any group of emergency workers must be prepared to follow orders from the agency they're working for. "You need people who are able to be disciplined, to follow the rules, so you would not put yourself in danger," she says. Volunteers must heed both medical and cultural instructions, she says. A volunteer who thinks he or she knows it all could end up creating problems. "You just cannot improvise and be the humanitarian Ebola tourist of the day," she says. So Gates' essay is doing what it should be doing: opening up a conversation. "Now that Gates has written his article," Liu says, "I need to write mine." One point she would make has to do with something as seemingly mundane as time away from work. Some medical workers in the U.S. were lined up and ready to go to West Africa, she recalls. But when it turned out they would miss not only a month of work when they were in the field, but another three weeks afterward for quarantine, "some of them just could not go."
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#1. To: Willie Green (#0)
Bill Gates, and those like him, are the worst epidemic anyone can conceive of.
OK, Bill. I'm ready. I'm huddled in my basement with bottles of water and canned food. You be sure to let me know when I can come out.
Big Owner of Monsanto Shares: Does Bill Gates Want Population Control? Bill Gates believes the density of the population in poor areas is too big, and with his depopulation plans he can solve that problem. Consider his huge buyout of Monsanto stock he owns millions of shares of Monsanto and Cargill stock, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation keep scooping it up. He owns more than $23 million worth, or 500,000 Monsanto shares. Seattle-based Agra-Watch, part of the Community Alliance for Global Justice, has said: Monsanto has a history of blatant disregard for the interests and well being of small farmers around the world
[This] casts serious doubt on the foundations heavy funding of agricultural development in Africa. It also casts serious doubt on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and its true interests in supporting the poor populations they so proudly claim they are trying to help. Gates also funds programs that blast mens reproductive organs with radiation so that they can no longer produce progeny, and covert nanotechnology that delivers dangerous vaccines. The Gates Foundation is also teaming up with the British government in raising $4 billion to fund their birth control agenda worldwide by 2020.
People in third world shit holes have lot's and lot's of kids because there is a good chance that some of those kids will die and won't be available to help the family. Having lot's of kids is an insurance policy for the family. People in countries that have reduced infant mortality and implemented market policies to create economic growth have fewer kids. It's just a fact.
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