we've been abandoned by our government (not that they cared anyways), and we're forced to go to work because of that fact. Individualism and american exceptionalism has poisoned the country, no one gives a fuck about each other, and we're all gonna fucking die because of some fucking rich colonials that thought we were special
Mind you, the spread is now so uncontrolled that even if everyone answered their phones / followed contact tracing rules religiously, it wouldn't help much. Contact tracing for covid works, sometimes, but only if you do it very early. The only thing that can slow down the spread at this point in the US is a serious, constraining, nationwide lockdown (all bars, schools and non essential stores closed nationwide, etc.) - which the US won't implement, and in fact I think genuinely doesn't have the capability to implement due in part to the individualism OP mentioned. It's not only a monstrous country, it's also a failed one.
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I think it's too late, most cases spread in homes or between close proximity people. Shutting down for another year will just slow the curve lol
I meant lockdown similar to what many EU countries (such as mine) did, where even family gatherings and the like are officially forbidden - almost impossible to enforce of course, but it was relatively well-followed here (probably wouldn't go that well in the US of course). No private parties, no marriages and the like. You're physically with the persons you live with for the duration and that's it. Can work from home, you do it, can't and non essential worker, you don't and the state pays your salary for the duration. Under those conditions, if followed by a large enough majority, I believe the virus incidence would decrease quickly (worked here in France).
The EU failed with Covid just as badly as the US did....
In a large part you're not wrong, especially when it came to anticipate a second wave, but take France for example. A new lockdown was instigated on the 28th of October; check the daily new cases and consider the incubation period; there is a net, and rapid, effect. In other words: even if your country is quickly becoming plagueland because you refused to listen to scientists for the benefits of The Line, it is possible to decrease spread relatively quickly even starting on an out of control situation by implementing a full, serious lockdown.
Per that link, France has had basically the same deaths per capita as the US (48,000 out of 60 million vs. ~260k out of 325 million)
France did not do a "lockdown". Schools and factories are open! They did exactly what the US is doing, just sooner and slightly harsher, without real productive things like "test the whole city" or "isolate positive cases in special, purpose areas to minimize spread".
That's the way that it had been the whole pandemic. Europe and the US have completely failed, and then only debate is on how miserable our policy of "total failure" should make the population.
Yes, this time schools stayed opened (which I agree is stupid); and yet our curve is noticeably going down, yours isn't.
The US had a curve that lagged Europe by 2-4 weeks last time, and it's shaping up to look exactly the same as before.
The idea that Europe did "so much better" is liberal bullshit, and frankly anti-Asian racism because it hypes up countries that did just as bad as the US, while ignoring countries that did much, much better in Asia (all of them)
I mean, Europe fucked up very badly and nobody's saying that, say, Vietnam or China didn't react to this infinitely better - they did. Yet I still think Europe did better than the US.
We're somehow at a point where I know multiple non-chud people who are planning to take flights across the country in the upcoming weeks/months. These are people who are mostly fully aware of the situation, not denialists or anything, but they have weddings and family or whatever and are just going for it anyway.