The gasoline on the fire was the lockdown and then money giveaway. What should have happened was we protected the vulnerable and asked those less vulnerable to wear masks and be careful but live as normal a life as possible. Instead what we did was close a lot of businesses, told everyone to stay home, and then gave a large group of people more money for free to stay home than they would have made other wise. We basically made everyone stir crazy and cash rich and then opened the flood gates.
No nation has yet figured out how to 'protect the vulnerable' - that was basically Sweden's strategy and it failed miserably - and it didn't save the economy for more than another month or so as their economic numbers are now right in line with the EU average. Even now, while the majority of the cases in the US are in younger populations compared to April/May, the majority of people in the hospitals are older. The other issue for the US is we have too many unhealthy people. If you took all the people that would be considered 'susceptible' it would be over 40% of the US adult population. It's hard to 'protect' that high of a percentage.
Also, we did not close businesses - the virus did. There are a number of studies out there that show that people's behavior changed before stay at home orders - roughly 75% of US economic activity dropped before stay at home orders were issued, only about 25% of lost economic activity was due to shutdowns.
We are starting to see it again. i saw a chart today, in the last 4 days eating in at restaurants has dropped by over 50% in Texas, over 40% in AZ and GA and by over 35% in FL. as cases rise economic activity will fall.
Finally, while deaths are currently flat (there was a little over 700 today) that is hardly something to praise. That is still the 3rd largest cause of death in the US and the largest cause that is infectious by 7X. Deaths are the most trailing indicator so they will likely rise in the next couple of weeks. Some of the models have been very good on this. They have generally had deaths decreasing until late June/beginning of July and then slowly increasing through July and August (fortunately not anywhere near the heights of April/May). in some states the death peak came as far as a month after the case peak in April/May. The states hit hardest at the time had the least delay between the case peak and the death peak and the average was about 10 days. Given the current surge appears to be hitting younger populations first and then transitioning into older populations the death peak is likely to be a longer delay. My hope is that the models are pretty accurate and the increase in death rates is relatively low.
We look like we are headed back into a difficult period, hopefully we do better this time. Today is the single largest case day in the US during the whole pandemic (though in reality it certainly isn't the day with the most cases as we test more now) - but still the positive case rate is now going up quickly so it is getting worse in a hurry. The 7 day avg case rate is now right near what it was in early April. AZ is down to 12% capacity in their hopsitals. Houston is at 97% capacity tonight. As of this evening FL is at 20% ICU capacity (and i believe that is after they misleadingly changed how they count bed utilization). 7 states are currently at all time highs in hopsitalizations. The big issue is starting around Memorial Day we simply stopped doing the little things we need to do to be able to have a relatively normal life - we aren't wearing masks, we aren't maintaining social distance, we are gathering too many people in one place. For some reason we watched what other countries did (or maybe we didn't watch) and then decided we didn't need to do those same things.