Shut down travel between the U.S. and West Africa. Quarantine people who've been to countries like Liberia for 21 days. Stop U.S. troops from going there to help.

So far, it's mostly Republicans like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul floating such measures. And even they haven't come out and endorsed them explicitly. But I'm willing to bet a lot of people hear such chatter and think, huh, that approach makes a lot of sense. Why not err on the side of caution? 

The answer, experts and health officials have keep reminding us, is that Ebola isn't as scary as it sounds.

To be clear, Ebola is incredibly scary if you have it. Its symptoms are awful and historically it has killed about half the people who develop it. But getting Ebola is a lot harder than catching the flu. You can only get Ebola by coming into contact with somebody who has the disease and is showing symptomsand, then, coming into contact with that person's bodily fluids. Protective gear works, if you know how to use it and, of course, if you can get your hands on it. That's the problem in West Africa, where thousands have already died. The health care infrastructure is weak, while supplies and trained professionals are in short supply.

That's not an issue here. Even though staff at a Dallas hospital failed to recognize that Thomas Duncan had Ebola when he first showed up in their emergency room, officials with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) say they've now tracked down and are monitoring everybody who came into contact with him. If anybody else gets sick, local hospitals have the facilities to treat those patients. As Texas Governor Rick Perry said last week, "There are few places in the world better equipped to meet the challenge that is posed in this case. … The public should have every confidence that the highly trained professionals involved here will succeed in this very important mission."

Yes, I just quoted Rick Perry approvingly. But you don't have to take his word for it, or mine for that matter. The media, so typically prone to overreaction, has generally done a terrific job of explaining the science of Ebola and why the U.S. is capable of containing it. Check out Denise Grady's clear, straightforward primer for the New York Times, for exampleor Atul Gawande's essay on the outbreak for the New Yorker. Towards the end of that article, Gawande, a physician, explains why a travel ban would be so counter-productive: 

No travel ban or quarantine will seal a country completely. Even if travel could be reduced by eighty per centitself a featmodels predict that new transmissions would be delayed only a few weeks. Worse, it would only drive an increase in the number of cases at the source. Health-care workers who have fallen ill would not be able to get out for treatment, and the international health personnel needed to quell the outbreak would no longer be able to go in. The local economy and health infrastructure would further collapse, causing a far wider spread of the disease. For months, Doctors Without Bordersalmost the lone group providing treatment serviceshas been crying out for help. The international response was contemptible.

None of this means that Duncan will be the last case of Ebola on U.S. soil. During a White House press conference on Friday, Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, warned Americans that "it is entirely conceivable there may be another case." But Fauci, like every other public health expert and official I've heard in the past few days, thinks the best thing we can do to protect ourselves is to help those countries that can't contain the virus on their own.

Jonathan Cohn

 

News from the last few days

EBOLA, CONTINUED:

On Sunday, the 

Washington Post

and the

Los Angeles Times 

published lengthy, thoroughly reported accounts of the outbreak. One takeaway from both stories is that the World Health Organization was slow to react to the crisis, even as other organizations, like Doctors Without Borders, was sounding alarms.

 

OBAMACARE:

Insurers are about to send a new round of cancellation notices to people who buy their own insurance plans, although experts expect the number of people affected

and perhaps the resulting furor

to be significantly smaller than it was last year. (

Julie Appleby

, Kaiser Health News) 

 

Articles and items that caught our attention:

 

That's the truth, Ruth: Jeffrey Toobin

says lower courts are already using the Hobby Lobby ruling to give religious organizations vast new exemptions from federal law, just as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg predicted. (

New Yorker

)

 

Want to help poor people? Give them money: Dylan Matthews

finds yet another study, this one based on aid to Syrian refugees, that suggests direct cash assistance is the most effective means of fighting poverty. (Vox)

 

Worst thing you'll read…maybe ever: 

At 

Business Insider

, a writer has one of the most unbelievable intros you'll ever read. Here's how it starts: "Few people in the middle class really understand the mindset of the richest people. After all, if they did, they would be among the top earners as well." Truly remarkable.

 

Stories we'll be watching on Monday:

 

It's the first Monday in October, so we'll be watching the

Supreme Court

though more out of tradition than anticipation. There may not be any major news there.

 

At QED

 

If you missed the analysis of Friday's jobs report,

Danny Vinik

has you covered. The economy is creating jobs and it seems to be strengthening, slowly. But wages are still stagnant.

Rebecca Leber

used two photos to demonstrate just how different the Ebola treatment conditions are in the U.S. and Africa. 

Eric Garcia

says that voter ID laws not only impose costs on the people who want to vote. They also impose costs on states that have to implement the laws. Elsewhere at the

New Republic

,

Brian Beutler

realizes that the Republican midterm strategy is just like a Seinfeld episode. It's about nothing.