I keep coming back to that theory +PG+. The transmission element is just not logical and doesn't jive with the facts we're told and what is easily researched about ebola.
The few people that we're told have this disease in the US came into close association with a lot of others. Think about how many people they encountered. Duncan was on an airplane, and then when he got to the US was expelling lots of bodily fluids, like vomit on the sidewalk that people walked through... Yet no one else has it from these circuмstances? Then Duncan died, and one of the nurses who wore PPE now has ebola from him, yet none of his family and friends have it? They were slobbering all over each other in that apartment when he was very ill before hospitalization, people coming and going, despite quarantine.
Somethings just not right. I read the PPE protocol for hemorrhagic fever and being in close contact like that with an ebola patient should = a lot more infected people. If this is real, there should be a bit of an explosion in diagnosed cases I'm sorry to say.