Madam Brynn,
thinking aloud
I do not think that we need to worry much about the mutation. We are already at an eighth generation mutation and research here in Boston is showing that there is nothing intelligent in subsequent mutation thus far. However, they are watching that remote possibility of this virus mutating to a type that is transmissible by air...but that seems to be as remote as a mutation that kills it's self. The other concern is that this virus is also known to go to sleep/hibernate.
Two quick points....a military lawyer I was talking with last night was suggesting that Ebola is not a crisis it sounds to be...not to downplay the seriousness, and it is good that we are talking about it as a crisis, better to hype it than hid it. But he was suggesting that the real crisis seams to be elsewhere, as in culture etc...so let's look at Ebola for a second, and compare to other virus like HIV.Is it a crisis? Ebola seems to be a crisis because of its very short gestation of 21 days, very physical manifestation such as bleeding from all open body parts...that quick that manifest, will scare anyone. But if we isolate the the 'tyranny of the urgent', is this virus more or less serious than that of other threats like HIV? HIV has a gestation of about 12 yrs before it manifests to AIDS. There are millions who have died with it and did not know they had it. Perhaps passed it on. Not sure we know how far it has mutated. In comparison to Ebola, I think that HIV is far much more serious because it is creepy and uncanny virus slow as compared to this Ebola that is on your face and suddenly. By the time you are discovering an HIV Crisis, your scope is in millions and your space to contain is overwhelmingly wide. But with Ebola, you discover it, on your face, gory, but arms-wide space, we can contain it, with care and risk. My second point, and I am borrowing from what my senator Elizabeth Edwards is asking...what is the relation with burial rites and Ebola? Lets be open. In Jamhuri I know, only the 'Mutiso the Mortician' touches the dead body. Luos and Luhyas look at the body and run cyring, kikuyus pass by view and wipe chicken tiers, and we are say 'hiyo ilikuwa ni siku yake'. Question is...what are west Africans doing in funerals that is aiding the spread of Ebola. All I am hearing is stuff like 'unacceptable' funeral rituals blabla...what is going on