Interesting you'd call Florida's Governor a dope. Unless I'm missing something, it's been said his policies have lead to a very low death rate from the virus in the state with the "oldest" population among all states. Are there other actions he took or failed to take which have made the situation worse than it should have been in the state?
Or are you saying he just sat back and let others make the decisions on actions to take and he just got lucky? Is it untrue that he mobilized teams of National Guard members who were dispatched to long term care facilities to do testing and other actions to assist the elderly housed in those facilities?
If I understood correctly, he closed nursing homes and assisted living centers to outsiders, including family members, and in doing so may have prevented the massive numbers of deaths experienced in states run by "smart" governors like Cuomo, Wolfe and others. As of a few days ago, Florida had 1827 deaths, of which 650 were nursing home residents (35.6%).
The overall death rate for the state is 0.000087 or 87 per million residents.
Here's the 10 states where over 60% of the virus deaths were nursing home residents and, by the way, you may be on to something about the northerners mocking Florida's policies when you look at the list:
81.6% Minnesota
77.1% New Hampshire
74.9% Rhode Island
68.6% Pennsylvania
67.8% Delaware
66.3% Nebraska
61.5% Washington
60.2% Massachusetts
60.2% Oregon
60.1% Maryland
Here's how one governor managed the safety and welfare of the elderly in his state:
The state reversed its policy after mounting criticism and deaths. The mandate is part of broader scrutiny of weaknesses at long-term care facilities that have made them hot spots for Covid-19.
www.wsj.com