If we did nothing and people keep dying then everyone would complain that we acted too slowly and did not do enough.
Damned if you do..damned if you don't...
Michigan went too far to be honest because in my state we have stay in place orders but not those stupid restrictions on travel in the state. Also landscapers, delivery people, exterminators, plumbers etc... are still working and out and about following safe guidelines. Verizon would not come to the house but did send me the equipment I needed for self installation.
If Spring Breakers are going to the beach, the governor could have closed the beaches. remember you can be safe but if 15 kidiots come back to your area carrying it and spread it to many others and create a hospital overload then it does affect us all. let's stop worrying about the old people many of you claim were dying anyway because the 4 people I know of who died were not in their 70s or 80s or even close to dying and had no other condition (one was 49 actually).
More importantly....herd immunity with a novel disease is not the answer, not sure why people keep bringing that up.
What will it take to achieve herd immunity with SARS-CoV-2?
As with any other infection, there are two ways to achieve herd immunity: A large proportion of the population either gets infected or gets a protective vaccine. Based on early estimates of this virus’s infectiousness, we will likely need at least 70% of the population to be immune to have herd protection.
- In the worst case (for example, if we do not perform physical distancing or enact other measures to slow the spread of SARS-CoV-2), the virus can infect this many people in a matter of a few months. This would overwhelm our hospitals and lead to high death rates.
- In the best case, we maintain current levels of infection—or even reduce these levels—until a vaccine becomes available. This will take concerted effort on the part of the entire population, with some level of continued physical distancing for an extended period, likely a year or longer, before a highly effective vaccine can be developed, tested, and mass produced.
- The most likely case is somewhere in the middle, where infection rates rise and fall over time; we may relax social distancing measures when numbers of infections fall, and then may need to re-implement these measures as numbers increase again. Prolonged effort will be required to prevent major outbreaks until a vaccine is developed. Even then, SARS-CoV-2 could still infect children before they can be vaccinated or adults after their immunity wanes. But it is unlikely in the long term to have the explosive spread that we are seeing right now because much of the population will be immune in the future.