Right, and so appointing a career political operative with no medical experience whatsoever as "Ebola czar" is the best way to defuse the political aspects, eh?
are you Josh Earnest in disguise?
The
real problems are (1) that the disease, once one is infected, has a high death rate, and (2) the authorities bungled their initial response.
It does look like the CDC at least is getting its act together, and one might commend them on acknowledging their initial errors and addressing them.
As long as you deny there is a problem, then you can't do anything to fix the situation, because you don't even see anything that needs fixing.
I'm not concerned about a widespread epidemic breaking out. I'm fairly confident that we'll be able to contain and control Ebola cases inside the US.
The bigger concern to me is that we give phony assurances that are too optimistic, and thereby lose credibility. I'd feel a lot better if they said, from the outset, "we expect a few dozen cases eventually, the disease is so contagious and world-wide travel is so common. We are gearing up to identify those prospective cases right away, isolate them, and prevent the spread beyond them, through timely and assertive action when and as needed."
Most people are grownups and can deal with problems if they are presented in a matter-of-fact manner. The single biggest
political problem has been government spokespeople talking down to the rest of us as if we were children who needed to be lied to because we were too immature to handle the truth. We can see several instances of that on this thread already.
Tell people you expect several dozen cases, and then when only 15 or 20 appear, people are reassured. Tell people there will be no further cases at all, and then when 5 or 10 appear, people get nervous.