and
Ebola nurse says she won't follow quarantine rules
Ordinarily, I don't care about this issue, except that the medical establishment and the CDC, which employs the "Ebola nurse", actively and regularly engage in social engineering projects to control what we eat, practice as a hobby, use to fuel our cars, how far we walk, etc. We are expected to abide by their directions but they prefer not to do so themselves.
This double-set of rules and expectations destroys trust in institutions and what they issue forth. As anyone sentient has noted, public questions about our Ebola protocols are not a "panic" on the part of the citizenry but an expression of how little trust remains for these once vaunted professions and institutions.
Oh, jeez; it just gets better, doesn't it?
The investigator who led the internal inquiry into the 2012 Secret Service prostitution scandal resigned in August after he was implicated in his own incident involving a prostitute, according to a report from the New York Times.
Again, trust in a once respected institution is shattered.
Hang on, this is questionable, too. Soldiers must abide, even those not exposed to the disease, but physicians and nurses need not?
BREAKING: Hagel: US troops returning from Ebola missions to be kept in supervised isolation for 21 days.
— The Associated Press (@AP) October 29, 2014