A coronavirus patient refused to quarantine, so deputies are surrounding his house to force him to (1 Viewer)

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Cold Ethyl

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A Kentucky novel coronavirus patient checked himself out of the hospital against medical advice. So to prevent him from spreading the virus, officials are surrounding his house to keep him there.
The 53-year-old man in Nelson County refused to quarantine himself after testing positive for Covid-19, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said.
Nelson County officials "forced an isolation" on the man, one of the first 20 confirmed Covid-19 cases in the state.
It's a step I hoped that I'd never have to take," Beshear said in a conference on Saturday. "But I can't allow one person who we know has this virus to refuse to protect their neighbors."
Beshear didn't share then how the government had forced the unnamed man to stay in his home.
But this week, Nelson County Sheriff Ramon Pineiroa told the Kentucky Standard that deputies will park outside of the man's home for 24 hours a day for two weeks. The patient is cooperating now, Pineiroa said.
When reached for comment by CNN, the Nelson County Sheriff's Department deferred all comments to Beshear
Nelson County Judge Executive Dean Watts told CNN affiliate WDRB the measure was necessary to keep the community safe.
"This is about us, not about 'I,'" Watts said. "So quarantine is a must. If we have to, we'll do it by force."
Most state laws for imposing quarantines are fairly broad. Kentucky law gives the Cabinet for Health and Family Services the power to declare and "strictly maintain" quarantine and isolation as it sees fit, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
The federal government hasn't authorized national quarantines or isolations yet, but President Donald Trump has that power. Under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, a president can issue an executive order authorizing isolation or quarantine for several contagious diseases, including severe acute respiratory syndromes like Covid-19.

 

Brainfart

Don't take what I say seriously...
A Kentucky novel coronavirus patient checked himself out of the hospital against medical advice. So to prevent him from spreading the virus, officials are surrounding his house to keep him there.
The 53-year-old man in Nelson County refused to quarantine himself after testing positive for Covid-19, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear said.
Nelson County officials "forced an isolation" on the man, one of the first 20 confirmed Covid-19 cases in the state.
It's a step I hoped that I'd never have to take," Beshear said in a conference on Saturday. "But I can't allow one person who we know has this virus to refuse to protect their neighbors."
Beshear didn't share then how the government had forced the unnamed man to stay in his home.
But this week, Nelson County Sheriff Ramon Pineiroa told the Kentucky Standard that deputies will park outside of the man's home for 24 hours a day for two weeks. The patient is cooperating now, Pineiroa said.
When reached for comment by CNN, the Nelson County Sheriff's Department deferred all comments to Beshear
Nelson County Judge Executive Dean Watts told CNN affiliate WDRB the measure was necessary to keep the community safe.
"This is about us, not about 'I,'" Watts said. "So quarantine is a must. If we have to, we'll do it by force."
Most state laws for imposing quarantines are fairly broad. Kentucky law gives the Cabinet for Health and Family Services the power to declare and "strictly maintain" quarantine and isolation as it sees fit, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
The federal government hasn't authorized national quarantines or isolations yet, but President Donald Trump has that power. Under the Commerce Clause of the Constitution, a president can issue an executive order authorizing isolation or quarantine for several contagious diseases, including severe acute respiratory syndromes like Covid-19.

He left cause he needed to go out and get toilet paper...
 

AmericanBoobeh

Keep your distance..
This user was banned
Welp the only solution...

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McM

ARSELING
The cops here had to surround a small refugee camp and extract an infected person these days. Others who had a big mouth and wanted to flee got arrested and locked/quarantined temporary into an old empty prison nearby.
 
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McM

ARSELING
Replace the word prison with concentration camp...lol

All the camps are memorials now. ;)
I visited Dachau and there was only one wooden barrack left for housing inmates but the crematorium and a small gas chamber were still intact.
 
All the camps are memorials now. ;)
I visited Dachau and there was only one wooden barrack left for housing inmates but the crematorium and a small gas chamber were still intact.
Of course they were still intact. They suffered no damage as they were constructed AFTER hostilities ceased. Most amazing more than the swimming pool, soccer field, band shell with orchestra pit for use by the inmates are the ram shackle " homicidal gas chambers" of Auschwitz. They are so shoddy construction they would have killed those operating the chambers as well as inmates and anyone within 50 ft of them. It's a kosher miracle so many survived. Let meknow if any of you gullible goyim need a bridge. I have one in Brooklyn I'll be sell u cheap....
 
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