British health officials have admitted that the killer disease Ebola will hit Britain within weeks. A combination of air travel, excessive legal and illegal immigration and a prior lack of political will to deal with disease vectors, will ensure that our island status will not protect us from Ebola.
It is likely that the first places in Britain to be affected by Ebola will be London. A large number of immigrants from areas where Ebola is found, plus the presence of major air transport hubs and lots of people packed together in confined spaces like the London Underground, could mean that the first place Ebola appears might be in one of London’s 32 boroughs. But the big question is which borough will it show up in first?
In the West of the Capital, it is likely that Ebola could show up in one of the boroughs near to Heathrow Airport, although it is unlikely that the much promoted screening at Heathrow will pick up anyone who is carrying Ebola. It is much more likely to pick up those suffering from other tropical diseases such as Malaria. The screening of passengers for fevers will not pick up those who are incubating Ebola and whose temperature will appear normal. Questioning passengers about their prior movements will also be ineffective because there is the strong possibility that travellers will lie about their previous movements in Ebola affected areas. If travellers from Ebola areas are staying in hotels or in private accommodation near to the airport then this could cause an Ebola hotspot in this area.
Some boroughs to the East of the Capital also have conditions which favour the spread and incubation of Ebola. In fact it is possible that Ebola could exist for longer before being picked up than in the Western boroughs that are used to dealing with security issues because of presence of the airport.
In the London Borough of Hackney it has been long established that illegal Bushmeat that could be contaminated with the Ebola virus is on sale in various African shops and allegedly also on Ridley Road market in Dalston. Although some of this Bushmeat is sold cooked, which goes some way to killing the virus, because of the illegal nature of it there is no guarantee that it has been cooked properly or thoroughly. The handling of Ebola infected meat and the ingestion of improperly cooked Bushmeat is an important vector for the spread of Ebola.
One of Hackney’s neighbouring boroughs, Newham (already a hotspot for tuberculosis), is also likely to be afflicted by Ebola. For those who don’t know Newham is a paradise for immigrants, both legal and illegal ones. Excessive immigration and pandering to minorities has seen an exodus of indigenous Britons to the extent that they make up only about 17% of the population there. It is easy for an African immigrant carrying Ebola to disappear in Newham. A significant cash based ‘Black Economy’ based around ethnic minority businesses and accommodation agents means that many illegals are completely under the radar in Newham. One indication that the Government expects Ebola to pop up in Newham is the fact that the local hospital for the area, Newham General, has started up an Ebola awareness project with signs highlighting the danger from Ebola and extra training for staff about Ebola. There is also the strong possibility that cultural practices that assist the spread of Ebola, such as the public washing of the dead, have for reasons of political correctness, not been challenged in boroughs like Newham when they really should have been.
It is the politicians who by their foolish and destructive policies of turning a blind eye to excessive levels and inappropriate types of immigration, who may have created the ideal conditions for Ebola to flourish in Britain’s capital city. Ebola is coming to Britain, the only question is where will it turn up first? I dread to think what will happen when Ebola hits London as it surely must.
Nearly every communicable disease needs some form of vector to help it transmit it from one person to another. In London, these vectors appear to be both social and ideological. Just as cultural practices and poverty have assisted the spread of Ebola in Africa so London has its own specific disease transmission vectors. The social vectors are large numbers of people living close by in one place, and the ideological vectors are the political policies of ‘diversity’, ‘immigration’ and ‘multiculturalism’.
It would be both tragic and ironic if thousands of Londoners died from a disease that could have been prevented from reaching our shores by the simple act of the Government being a lot more vigorous about who this country allowed to cross its borders.
I think that the Establishment would rather potentially thousands of British people died than some peoples feelings are hurt by imposing a travel ban.