- Joined
- Feb 18, 2016
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Wow are you off base. Total deaths in the US may be high, but deaths per 1 Million in population are low. In reality the US is much better than the UK, Spain and most European countries. % wise much less chance of dying here. We have also tested double the next country and a lot more than most so off course the number of cases positive are high. Other countries didn't have a strong enough government to provide adequate testing like in the US. Coronavirus Update (Live): 2,556,515 Cases and 177,608 Deaths from COVID-19 Virus Pandemic - Worldometer
We have tested a smaller- much smaller- percentage of our population than any country in Europe. Far smaller percentage than Korea (population of 50 million). Seven times as many people have died in Connecticut than in Korea, though Korea's population is 14X larger.
And though the number of deaths per 100,000 population is lower than Spain and Italy, the virus is just getting started in places like Kansas, South Dakota, and elsewhere.
As a person who features multiple conditions that make me vulnerable to die an agonizing death should I become infected, it's personal. Opening up hairdressers, or hosting 10,000 people for a UConn basketball game, many of whom will become infected and head back to Groton and Greenwich, means hundreds, if not thousands, more people dying.
And quite possibly me.