At this point, all statistics provided by health experts should be viewed as "educated predictions" but not much more than that. Guidance has been changed several times over what is and isn't acceptable. The much-maligned HCQ treatment fell into, out of and may now be back into favor. Multiple states have funked up the reporting process for cases. A guy that I work with in my industry lost his dad to chronic COPD and they tried to report him as a Covid death despite him never testing positive for it. So many people tried to use this disease for one selfish reason or another (political, financial, chaos, whatever) that it's created a situation where credibility is in short supply. This Franklin Veaux guy who is linked above shows his own lack of grasp on reality at the end with "If we reopen the economy, it will be destroyed anyway," because he apparently doesn't understand infection rates and doesn't account for mutations or mortality factor.
Having said that, we're already past the point of needing to get back to living life in a semi-normal way, or we're going to cause other health issues (lack of testing at hospitals for other illnesses like cancer, mental health issues, drug overdoses, an uptick in domestic violence and violence against children who live in troubled homes, etc.).
I've been bowling a summer league at DeLuna in Pensacola, Fla. Kris Prather's dad runs the league and the pro shop there. We're muddling through as best we can. We did lose a team to positive Covid tests, and one of those bowlers was said to have ended up hospitalized. It's a 20-team league (60 bowlers) and most have stuck with it.
Masks are encouraged, but it's the summer in the South and probably only 5-10 bowlers actually bowl with the masks on due to heat/sweat on the face/etc. I tried and I can't do it. I would say to anyone reading this who hasn't tried to get back into league that you're probably not going to like bowling in league very much with one on, especially if you are in a warmer area.
By the way, in my critique of Covid response, I'm not saying I've found the way out of this, either. But I also can't sign onto the idea of essentially giving up two years of my already short life on this planet on the chance that I might get sick from this thing, either.
Jess