This "so what?" summarizes the attitude of many governments.
Oh come on. Why must we have this attitude in all things. Governments are like families: they are all broken in their own, unique way. In Brazil's case, Bolsonaro holds the distinction of being the highest-profile "coronavirus don't even fucking real" in the world, although Belarus' Lukashenko has recently become competitive for the title. More generally Brazil's handling of the outbreak has mimicked Russia's most closely, with local leaders mostly taking the lead while the central government eventually deciding to stay quiet and periodically comment gravely about the seriousness of things (this is similar to the US response, but the comparison is complicated by the US Federals govt. vacillating wildly between "literally giving everyone cash" to "this is a state problem, we did what we could." day-by-day; while Russia and Brazil have seen more consistent, if not better policy).
I mean understand what healthcare collapse means, not that the public doesn't hear about "healthcare collapse" in the news.
For instance, healthcare collapse doesn't mean zero healthcare - it really just means that resources are exhausted so triage will have to take place and people will be turned away for certain conditions. It also probably means lower total capacity because some of the health care providers are "out of service" due to illness or refusal to work.
But the public hears "collapse" and I guarantee many of them think it's like a bridge that collapses and can't be used at all until it's entirely rebuilt.
What I mean is the term "collapse" itself causes anxiety. If they would have just said "reached its capacity" or something less alarmist, the anxiety could be reduced.
I'd be so bold as to suggest that anxiety has a negative correlation with deathrates in this pandemic.
Also, hospitals *did* reaching their capacity in New York. They didn't massively exceed them as predicted in the worse case scenarios, but the number of people who died alone at home is a significant percentage of the total death toll in the city.
I'm not the one taking instruction from the government on what to believe.
Oh China did horrifically if we're going to compare it to "fair" things and not simply the US today, as you are, as Americans often do (do not make the classic mistake of going full anti-American and still being Amerocentric!). Yugoslavia is an excellent example of the power of an authoritarian government to stop an epidemic in its tracks, one far deadlier than Coronavirus, and the PRC does not come off well in that comparison. An outbreak of 140 cases of Hemorrhagic Smallpox on one day. Admittedly, a vaccine existed, but the response rested on immediate declaration of martial law, numerous
cordons sanitaires, roadblocks, nationwide lockdown and heavy quarantining. From March to May. The Chinese government acted on January 23rd, the outbreak started in December, with the virus identified on January 7th. I'm not speaking as an American, I'm speaking as an exile of an authoritarian state that was proud to be the
last smallpox outbreak in all of Europe. By
that standard no, they did a pretty awful job. So did everyone else, sure, but as I've said before and I'll say again, everyone pays the debts of an individual person, state, or nation's refusal or inability to act, and it must be paid with steep interest.
But there are reports of reinfection, or at least testing positive again, of recovered patients.
Recently the South Koreans have said that the 'reinfection' numbers come from the PCR tests picking up inactivated virus fragments in recovered patients.
I still think it's too early to be sure
Well yes that's what everyone has said. No one has come out and said "Here is
definitive proof that you can catch it again", people have said "proof that you
can't get it again has not been found yet." Which is, ah, significantly less committal.