Number of Ebola Cases ‘Probably Doubling Every Three to Four Weeks’

October 10th, 2014

Via: Irish Independent:

The UN special envoy on Ebola says the number of cases is probably doubling every three to four weeks and the response needs to be 20 times greater than it was at the beginning of October.

6 Responses to “Number of Ebola Cases ‘Probably Doubling Every Three to Four Weeks’”

  1. RBNZ says:

    is there a graph any where? Is this exponential growth?

    Georgia Guidestones anyone?

  2. tenzenmen says:

    Some considerations:
    – Epidemics seem to have a “natural” lifespan; IOW they come and they go, eventually. Immune systems adapt, other factors and variables that triggered the rapid multiplication wax and wane.

    – It is difficult to trust or believe the same people that cry wolf (and often manufacture the wolves in the first place) – CDC, WHO etc. Who in their right mind would ever trust anything from any gov’t agency?
    http://www.nomorefakenews.com/

  3. alvinroast says:

    There are also any number of graphs and charts showing improvements in the economy and the effectiveness of Statin drugs and any number of other things. Resorting to statistics is usually the worst kind of lie.

    There are a reported 750 million cell phones in Africa. Some of those must be in West Africa. Why has no one uploaded any video of a real Ebola epidemic.

    @tenzenmen – thanks for the link

    Here’s my favorite video of the “epidemic”.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0wM9A-a2_Wk

    Why are they pretending that there is no real epidemic? Is it to make us less afraid? If that were the goal, they could just back off on the hype.

    The pandemic meme has been going on for so many years now that no one will believe it if their is a real wolf. Whether there is a real epidemic of Ebola or something else, the marshal law and forced vaccinations are serious. I’m sure a lot of people are going to die. I just don’t think it will necessarily be from Ebola.

  4. Eileen says:

    I’m late on this post sorry. I thought this was pretty interesting:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YEDgJQdjv1A&list=UUa2gbBXGeGh-Pdtugdg_qcQ&feature=player_embedded

    @alvinroast

    There’s always money to made from an epidemic. I can’t look for the link now, but there are reportedly 600,000 deaths in W. Africa just this year from TB. It is sad, very sad only that some supposed “entrepreneurs” in the world make most of their money when people are dying from a “disease” and they have the possible cure. How about giving people in W. Africa shots to prevent TB you assholes? No, we need to invent a new disease that will scare everybody. BOO! This is so much history repeating itself it is not funny.
    What about the millions the DOD spent on Tamiflu which ended up being worthless? History repeats itself. Keep your D3 intake high every day you aren’t out in the sun, and tell these assh*les no matter what scare techniques they use to kcuf off!
    Georgia Stones indeed. If these Georgia Stones people had real stones, or balls, they wouldn’t remain anonymous.

  5. Eileen says:

    Statistics on TB:
    One third of the world’s population is thought to have been infected with M. Tuberculosis, with new infections occurring at a rate of about one per second. In 2007, there were an estimated 13.7 million chronic active cases globally, while in 2010, there were an estimated 8.8 million new cases and 1.5 million associated deaths, mostly occurring in developing countries. The absolute number of tuberculosis cases has been decreasing since 2006, and new cases have decreased since 2002. The distribution of tuberculosis is not uniform across the globe; about 80% of the population in many Asian and African countries test positive in tuberculin tests, while only 5-10% of the United States population tests positive. More people in the developing world contract tuberculosis because of compromised immunity, largely due to high rates of HIV infection and the corresponding development of
    AIDS.

    http://allafrica.com/stories/201404011072.html

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