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Border protection - who caused this problem? (Read 2344 times)
juliar
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #15 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 7:43pm
 
Kevin Rudd has seen the light and now recognizes he has sinned and he begs for forgiveness from his beloved constituents.

Kevin Rudd has received counseling for his remiss conditions and is now ready, like a flaming phoenix, to rise again and lead his beloved Labor to a resounding victory at the next election.

Kevin Rudd is promising Miss Gillard an ambassadorial posting at Antarctica, which with global worming, will soon be a tropical paradise.
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Gist
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #16 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 7:51pm
 
...

What's that again?  Grin Grin
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"When our military goes to war it should be for purposes and objectives clearly in Australia’s interests, not merely because the Americans want some company" - Malcolm Fraser (2012 Whitlam Oration)
 
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juliar
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #17 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 7:54pm
 
I thought you'd like that as Kevin 12 is the smiling face Australians want to see on the TV again.
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BatteriesNotIncluded
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #18 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 7:58pm
 
RACIST PROPAGANDA BREEDS ANTHRAX!

WELCOME TO THE HELL WE BRED PEOPLE!!

DON'T ACT ALL INNOCENT: STAND UP AND SAY SOMETHING OR SUFFER YOUR OWN INHUMANITY!!!


Cry Cry Cry Cry Shocked Huh Huh Angry Sad Sad Sad Sad
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*Sure....they're anti competitive as any subsidised job is.  It wouldn't be there without the tax payer.  Very damned difficult for a brainwashed collectivist to understand that I know....  (swaggy) *
 
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juliar
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #19 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 8:08pm
 
Could Australians catch anthrax from illegals who have been crawling around in Indonesia which might have some anthrax hanging around or what about rabies ?

You may have heard about anthrax and wondered what it is. Some people are worried that the germ that causes anthrax could be spread and used as a weapon. Although this is a frightening thought, the government and police are working on ways to protect us
.

In the meantime, it's important not to panic over anthrax — the chance that you or someone in your family could ever get it is very small. One of the ways you can feel better is to learn about the disease. When you know what it is and how you can get it, it doesn't seem quite as scary.

So here are answers to some questions you might have about anthrax:

What is anthrax?
Anthrax is an infection caused by bacteria (a type of germ) called Bacillus anthracis (say: buh-sil-us an-thray-sus). These bacteria make spores, a form of the germ covered by a protective shell. The spores can live for years in the soil, and they cause anthrax when they enter the body. Although the disease is most common in farm animals — like sheep, cows, and goats — there's a small chance that people can get it as well, usually from some type of contact with an animal or part of an animal that had anthrax.
How do people get anthrax?
People can get anthrax if they are exposed to the spores. (Exposed means that a germ that can cause disease is found in the same place that you are — like in the same room — where it could come into direct contact with your body.) But here's the important part: Just being exposed to these spores doesn't mean that people will get sick.

To get sick, people would have to have contact with the spores in one of three very specific ways: they would have to breathe thousands of these spores all the way into their lungs; they would have to eat meat that had spores in it (meat that spreads anthrax comes from animals that were infected with the bacteria and usually is not cooked fully); or they would have to handle something with spores on it and get spores in cuts on their skin.

This may sound scary, but even when people come into contact with the spores it's unlikely that they will get sick. If the bacteria do not get into the skin, digestive tract, or lungs, the disease will not develop.
Is anthrax contagious?
Anthrax is not contagious, which means it does not spread from person to person the way the flu can spread between family members or classmates.
How is anthrax treated?
Anthrax can often be successfully treated with antibiotics (medicine that kills bacteria).
Should I worry about anthrax?
Anthrax is very rare. In the fall of 2001, a few people became infected with anthrax after someone used letters in the mail to spread the spores that cause the disease. Although this was scary, only a few people became sick and the police have been working hard to stop anything like that from happening again. A person's chance of getting anthrax from spores that someone spreads or from any type of contact with an infected animal is very, very low.
If you're still worried about anthrax, remember that you, your family, and your friends will probably never be exposed to anthrax spores. Talking to your teacher or parent may make you feel better and give you answers to any other questions about anthrax.

Reviewed by: Steven Dowshen, MD

http://kidshealth.org/kid/health_problems/infection/anthrax.html
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juliar
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #20 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 8:56pm
 
How long will it be before 1 or more of the illegal middle eastern invading bludgers invited here by the irresponsible Miss Gillard brings the deadly rabies virus into Australia ?

Health experts say Australia must brace for rabies arrival from Indonesia

BY: ANDY DREWITT From: The Australian January 03, 2012 12:00AM

A rabies epidemic in Bali has killed 130 people. Now 275,000 half-wild dogs are being vaccinated.

EXPERTS battling a rabies epidemic in Bali are warning Australians to brace for the arrival of the disease.

Rabies is island-hopping towards Australia through the Indonesian archipelago and is about 600km north of Darwin on the island of Pulau Larat, where it killed 19 people in 2010.

Helen Scott Orr, a former NSW chief veterinary officer working with the Indonesian government to help eradicate rabies from Bali, said the risk to Australia was increasing as more Indonesian islands fell to the disease.

Rabies has spread to 24 of Indonesia's 33 provinces.

"If it gets into West Papua, it is strongly likely that it will spread slowly and inexorably down through the entire island of Papua New Guinea, in which case it would be extremely close to our borders across the Torres Strait," Dr Scott Orr said.

"We don't know if the threat will be there in one year, in five years, in 10 years, or in 20 years -- it's just a likelihood that the threat will come."

A spokeswoman for the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry -- which oversees the Northern Australia Quarantine Strategy -- said rabies outbreaks on the Indonesian islands of Flores, Bali, Pulau Larat and Ambon had increased the risk of the disease entering Australia.

She said the "most likely potential pathway into remote northern Australia is an illegally imported, infected animal arriving by boat".

She said the department was controlling border movements of animals across the Torres Strait, increasing surveillance of animal health and educating northern populations about the disease.

Dr Scott Orr fears that indigenous communities will be hardest hit if rabies crosses Torres Strait.

"I understand that in northern Australia there are many indigenous communities with quite large groups of semi-free-living dogs that aren't restrained and roam around," Dr Scott Orr said.

"Those dogs, if they became infected, obviously would become a threat to the communities, to the safety of all the people in those communities. It's a terrible and terrifying disease when it occurs."

Rabies kills at least 55,000 people worldwide a year. Experts suspect that a rabid dog brought on a fishing boat from Sulawesi or Flores islands introduced the disease to Bali, where it has killed more than 130 people since 2008.

Teams of dog catchers from Bali Animal Welfare Association have worked with the Indonesian government to vaccinate more than 275,000 canines -- a costly exercise that attracted funding from the Australian government's AusAID program and the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research.

BAWA director Janice Girardi said Australia's eagerness to support the vaccination program was motivated partly by humanitarian concern, but also as insurance to keep rabies clear of its borders.

"There's no rabies in Australia other than bat rabies, so I know it's a huge concern for Australia should rabies arrive on boats from the Indonesian islands," she said.

Dr Scott Orr believes Australia's best hope of remaining rabies-free is by helping our northern neighbours control the disease.

"We would like to see it progressively eradicated from eastern Indonesia and pushed back and right out of the region, if we could," she said.

"If rabies got established in the wild dog population in northern Australia, for example, there would need to be a very sustained campaign to eradicate it. And experience from around the world has shown that to eradicate it from feral or wild populations of animals, you need to have aerial distribution of vaccine by baits.

"Doing that across a large part of Northern Australia would be a horrendously expensive and difficult and long-term operation."

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/health-science/health-experts-say-australia...
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Grey
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #21 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 9:11pm
 
Quote:
Now 275,000 half-wild dogs are being vaccinated.


Are we to assume that all dogs in Indonesia are 'half wild'? Or are wild and tame dogs excluded for some reason? Bollocks innit?
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"It is in the shelter of each other that the people live" - Irish Proverb
 
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sir prince duke alevine
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #22 - Jan 10th, 2012 at 10:02pm
 
Do you make it a habit to have refugees bite you, juliar?
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Disclaimer for Mothra per POST so it is forever acknowledged: Saying 'Islam' or 'Muslims' doesn't mean ALL muslims. This does not target individual muslims who's opinion I am not aware of.
 
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Armchair_Politician
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #23 - Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:17am
 
sir prince duke alevine wrote on Jan 10th, 2012 at 10:02pm:
Do you make it a habit to have refugees bite you, juliar? 


Did you hear about the pilot of the government-charted aircraft who refused to take off from Christmas Island on a flight to Australia because one of the passengers had some kind of highly contagious disease that has long been eradicated from this country?
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chicken_lipsforme
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #24 - Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:19am
 
Armchair_Politician wrote on Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:17am:
sir prince duke alevine wrote on Jan 10th, 2012 at 10:02pm:
Do you make it a habit to have refugees bite you, juliar? 


Did you hear about the pilot of the government-charted aircraft who refused to take off from Christmas Island on a flight to Australia because one of the passengers had some kind of highly contagious disease that has long been eradicated from this country?


Yes, the pilot was correct in standing his ground.
I'm not too sure what their infection control procedures would be like on Christmas Island though to deal with this.
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"Another boat, another policy failure from the Howard government"

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Armchair_Politician
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #25 - Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:27am
 
chicken_lipsforme wrote on Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:19am:
Armchair_Politician wrote on Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:17am:
sir prince duke alevine wrote on Jan 10th, 2012 at 10:02pm:
Do you make it a habit to have refugees bite you, juliar? 


Did you hear about the pilot of the government-charted aircraft who refused to take off from Christmas Island on a flight to Australia because one of the passengers had some kind of highly contagious disease that has long been eradicated from this country?


Yes, the pilot was correct in standing his ground.
I'm not too sure what their infection control procedures would be like on Christmas Island though to deal with this.


I would provide a link to the news story - I am sure it was in the major newspapers at the time. Just haven't found it yet, but I do remember it clearly as any aviation-related news is of great interest to me due to being a student pilot.
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Re: Border protection - who caused this problem?
Reply #26 - Jan 11th, 2012 at 7:29am
 
"There's no rabies in Australia other than bat rabies, so I know it's a huge concern for Australia should rabies arrive on boats from the Indonesian islands,"


It is NOT rabies.

In May 1996 a black flying fox showing nervous signs was found near Ballina, NSW.

Samples were sent to Yeerongpilly Veterinary Laboratory in Queensland as part of a surveillance program for the Hendra virus.

Isolation and gene sequencing showed that it was a lyssavirus, which is closely related to common rabies.

Australia's rabies-free status has not changed as a result of the Australian bat lyssavirus discovery.
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The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it's difficult to determine whether or not they are genuine - Abraham Lincoln
 
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