Expect
plenty more batshit-crazy nonsense from the likes of Alex Jones on
this subject.
“President
Barack Obama’s latest executive order "mandates the
apprehension and detention of Americans who merely show signs of
‘respiratory illness.’"
—
Bloggers on Sunday,
August 3rd, 2014 in an article posted on Infowars.com
Website: "Obama mandated detention for people with respiratory illness linked
to Ebola"
By
Jon Greenberg
6
August, 2014
The
arrival of two Americans infected with the Ebola virus at an Atlanta
hospital has ginned up the fear mill and the conspiracy website
Infowars.com has fused fear of infection with fear of Big Brother.
When
the first American was admitted to Emory University Hospital’s
special infectious disease treatment center, Inforwars.com wrote,
"United States officials brought an affected (sic) patient into
the country only days after President (Barack) Obama signed an
executive order mandating the detention of Americans who show signs
of ‘respiratory illness’."
At
another point, the article says Obama’s latest executive order
"mandates the apprehension and detention of Americans who merely
show signs of 'respiratory illness.' "
The
article correctly reports that President Barack Obama signed an
executive order on July 31, but beyond that, the accuracy quotient
falls rapidly.
As
for the Ebola patients, government officials did not bring them back
to America, as Infowars said. While the State Department facilitated
the paperwork for the medical evacuations, these people arrived in a
private chartered jet paid for by the religious charities they worked
for, Serving in Mission and Samaritan’s Purse. At a news
conference, Bruce Johnson, the president of Serving in Mission USA,
said his group has spent about $1 million on the two patients since
their illness was discovered.
Second,
and more important for this fact-check, is what the executive order
says. It's much more targeted than the article describes, it isn’t
aimed at Ebola, and while it allows health officials to quarantine
someone with a highly contagious disease, it does not mandate it.
On
July 31, Obama modified a 2003 executive order from President George
W. Bush. The original listed the communicable diseases for which the
Department of Health and Human Services was authorized to issue an
isolation or quarantine order. Bush specifically mentioned Severe
Acute Respiratory Syndrome (SARS), a disease associated with "fever
and signs and symptoms of pneumonia or other respiratory illness."
Obama
updated the particular reference to SARS to include a broader array
of possible respiratory illnesses. The new text reads as follows:
"Severe
acute respiratory syndromes, which are diseases that are associated
with fever and signs and symptoms of pneumonia or other respiratory
illness, are capable of being transmitted from person to person, and
that either are causing, or have the potential to cause, a pandemic,
or, upon infection, are highly likely to cause mortality or serious
morbidity if not properly controlled. This subsection does not apply
to influenza."
To
be clear, the update has nothing to do with Ebola or the current
outbreak. Ebola is not a respiratory disease (the most prominent
signs are diarrhea and vomiting) and the original 2003 executive
order already listed Ebola.
The
White House press office told PunditFact that the change was aimed at
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS), an illness with symptoms
that do match the updated executive order.
More
critically for our examination, the updated order does not "mandate"
the apprehension and detention of people who show signs of
respiratory illness.
Wendy
Parmet, a law professor at Northeastern University School of Law, is
one of three legal scholars who prepared a report for the American
Civil Liberties Union that warned about overreach by the government
in responding to pandemics. While Parmet said the new text is very
broad, it has clear limits.
"It
only applies to those with symptoms of a disease that have caused or
have the potential to cause a pandemic, or have the potential of
causing mortality or serious morbidity," Parmet said. "I
wouldn’t think the typical cold would apply."
In
fact, the order specifically excludes the flu.
What
happens if you do have Ebola, or MERS, or one of the other
afflictions specified in the executive order?
Title
42 United States Code Section 264 gives the Department of Health and
Human Services the authority to isolate an infected person. The
department must determine that a person presents a risk to public
health. Its authority is limited to people as they enter the country
or attempt to travel from one one state to another.
In
other scenarios, the power to isolate or quarantine individuals rests
with the states, Parmet said.
Our
ruling
Infowars.com
said Obama’s latest executive order "mandates the apprehension
and detention of Americans who merely show signs of ‘respiratory
illness.’"
That’s
a fundamental misreading of the executive order Obama signed and the
power the federal government has.
The
updates Obama made to a 2003 executive order do not mandate the
apprehension and detention of people who show signs of "respiratory
illness," has nothing to do with the current Ebola crisis and
only affect people entering the country or crossing state lines.
We
rate the claim Pants on Fire.
See
also - Disinfo
Wars: Alex Jones’ War on Your Mind
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