But when does it run its course? There are 20 million people in FL.
Theres about 100,000 in Lakewood. I'm no good at statistics, but someone else can do the math. The amount of people who got it in Lakewood vs the population should show what percent you need for herd immunity.
Studies show that ~2 million in NYC were infected yet only ~400k were reported. Florida is at max testing capacity (theres a terrible backlog) so however many where tested there are many times more that where actually infected.
IMHO (and I actually mean humble, I'm just speculating) I'd say herd immunity is just about to set in and the "curve will flatten" - and go down real soon.
I know MANY people in Lakewood who didn't have antibodies, and have not been practicing social distancing (along with the rest of lakewood) for ~5 weeks now and still have not gotten it. Many people with people in the same house who've gotten it have not gotten it.
The biggest question I get from all this is, what is value of a human life? How much do you give up as a race to save lives? We can all live in shelter in our homes for the rest of our lives, not just to save people from this virus, but from any other too. From car crashes and from cancer from living in a smog filled city. Or we can walk around destroying our universe, bringing upon us all sorts of disease and death, but "living life to our fullest".
Obviously there is a middle ground that is right, but how do you determine that?