There was an idea of flattening the curve, which was done successfully, for the most part. The deaths we've seen would have been so much worse if we hadn't done that. The thing is, the deaths we've seen at the rate we've seen them are still unacceptable. By all accounts, the hospitals have not been grossly overwhelmed.
@CountValentine There comes a certain point where closing things up costs you more lives right now than not closing. That's where we get the concept of essential services. Being that we don't live in a perfect world, that line is never going to be drawn at the exact optimal place. I don't claim to have that line, and I don't think anyone does. I do think that people putting the economy first are costing lives that don't need to be lost. Does that give me the moral high ground? I don't think so. It just gives me different priorities.
I can comfortably say that the Governor of Georgia values life less than I do. He has other responsibilities and other priorities. It doesn't make me better than him, but it does mean he's more comfortable sacrificing lives for economic purposes than I am.