Obama’s Border Policy Fueled Epidemic, Evidence Shows
By Neil Munro in the Daily Caller
The deadly EV-D68 enterovirus epidemic, which struck thousands of kids this fall, was likely propelled through America by President Barack Obama’s decision to allow tens of thousands of Central Americans across the Texas border, according to a growing body of genetic and statistical evidence.
The evidence includes admissions from top health officials that the
epidemic included multiple strains of the virus, and that it appeared
simultaneously in multiple independent locations.
The question can be settled if federal researchers study the genetic
fingerprint of the EV-D68 viruses that first hit kids in Colorado, Missouri and
Illinois to see if they are close relatives to the EV-D68 viruses found in
Central America.
Jayden Broadway, 9, was diagnosed with EV-D68 in early October
(http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/enterovirus-spreads-across-the-nation/)
Officials ”have to do the genetic analysis” to disprove or prove the
link, Nora Chapman, an enterovirus scientist at the University of Nebraska,
told The Daily Caller.
But there’s already more than enough statistical evidence for American
citizens to demand that scientists test the viruses to see if Obama’s
progressive border priorities spread the dangerous contagion throughout the
country during 2014.
So far, that virus has been found in nine American
kids who died from illness, has apparently
inflicted unprecedented polio-like paralysis in roughly 50
kids, and has put hundreds of young American kids
into hospital emergency wards and intensive care units throughout more than 40
states.
A series of government researchers, health experts and academics refused
to comment, or else urged self-censorship, when they were pressed by TheDC
for statistical and scientific data that would exonerate Obama and his
deputies.
“I would just steer away from that— it is not helpful, so why bring it
up,” said Lone Simonsen, a professor at George Washington University’s Department of
Global Health and the research director of the university’s Global Epidemiology
Program. “A better angle [is] ‘We’re just learning what this outbreak is
all about,’” she told TheDC.
Columbia University researcher Rafal Tokarz, one of the nation’s top experts on the EV-D68 virus, declined to
comment to TheDC about the impact of Obama’s border policies. “I cannot
comment… and at this time it would not be appropriate for me to do so… I would
really rather not comment,” he said in email conversations.
The issue is dangerous for scientists because it could spike existing
public opposition to the unpopular effort by Obama, Democrats and business-backed Republicans to increase the
migration of foreign nationals — including many
foreign scientists — into the United States. That inflow is a top priority for
the Democratic leaders, who have the power to make life difficult for
grant-dependent American scientists who discover politically damaging
information.
Eli Walker was EV-D68′s first casualty this year (photo:
http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/new-jersey-preschooler-dies-from-enterovirus-d68/)
That sensitivity showed up Oct. 16, when a top staffer for Rep. Luis
Gutierrez, a champion of increased immigration from Latin
America, denounced the evidence for an Obama-disease link: “Rush
[Limbaugh], don’t let facts dissuade you! Enterovirus outbreak likely not
coming from immigrants,” Guttierez communications director Douglas Rivlin
tweeted, while linking to an article that
tried to stigmatize investigations into any
possible link.
On Oct. 29, The New York Times produced a vague article about EV-D68′s
possible role in the paralysis cases, headlined ”Doctors
Mystified by Paralysis in Dozens of Children.” The article
quoted Mark Pallansch, who heads the viral diseases unit at the federal
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, saying “we don’t have a single
clear hypothesis that’s the leading one at this point.” He also said that
American kids have less than a one-in-a-million chance of being
paralyzed. The Times ignored the possible link to Obama’s border policy.
But public trust in government would nudge upward if there is strong
scientific evidence against the widespread concern that Obama recklessly loosed
the EV-D68 epidemic. The Snopes.com site tried to debunk the idea, but could only reject it as
“problematic.”
The EV-D68 controversy is a weaker version of the Ebola fight, where
Obama has opposed stringent federal and state barriers to the arrival of
foreign travelers who may be carrying Ebola. The EV-D68 virus is far, far
less dangerous than Ebola, but it also may be harder to counter because it has
now spread throughout the United States.
There is no vaccine for EV-D68, so health experts expect more victims.
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