Nope, just part of the continued process of people not understanding the data.
@RonJohn summarized it perfectly above. Most of us don't fault the government for shutting down last spring. We didn't know what we didn't know. We learned quickly that despite the government's best efforts, it was unable to even come close to making people whole when their businesses and jobs were shut down. And still, we had 30,000 new cases a day during arguably the best actual shutdown we had. And that was when testing was limited due to FDA constraints, so we probably had 50,000-75,000 new cases a day.
Since then we've learned its behaviors that matter. Arbitrary rules like not being allowed to walk in a park, not being allowed to buy paint to work on your house, and bars closing at certain hours do nothing. Wear masks, keep your distance, and practice good hygiene. If you do that, you can do almost anything you want. So shutdowns aren't necessary. Neither are mask mandates.
Back to your question, we had a state mask mandate for a very small sliver of time. We took a ton of slack for how long we didn't have one, but the truth was in South Carolina that 98% of our population was under local mask mandates. So all those peaks in June, January, and now are all despite the exact same ordinances and rules in our state. Sometimes we see a peak, sometimes we don't, but the rules have remained the same.
Florida has significantly more elderly people than California and a significantly higher population density than California. Yet they're wide open and with better covid numbers, while California spent much of last year shut down and under tight restrictions. While many open states have better covid numbers and 1/3rd the unemployment rate, California had the worst of all worlds. Why? You'd have to ask them. I would postulate that all the tight restrictions leads to people gathering in homes where they can get away with it than outdoors where its safe but not allowed. But that's all speculation. The main point is that looking at the data, shutdowns and tight restrictions have accomplished nothing here other than frustration and financial ruin.