I wonder if I should take the bait and respond to this. It's obvious to me that these comments are so vague that they can be read in a large number of different ways. Overall, they're meaningless.
Or – in the spirit of pouring cold water on posts that can inflame unwarranted fears of disease & death – should I respond?
Actually there are at least three things.
the mortality in older patients is acknowledged.
You cannot speak of Covid-19s mortality in older patients without comparing it to known mortalities of other infectious viral diseases such as influenza, viral pneumonia, etc. In the case of influenza, get mortality data for each season's flu, not a composite average of all seasons. They do vary significantly.
The disease is acknowledged as a pandemic.
Saying it's a pandemic is meaningless. How does that add anything to your claim of "millions dead"? Influenza is a known pandemic each season. It kills plenty of people each year. Yet, there is no widespread fear & loathing for the seasonal flu.
And contageion is viewed as unavoidable for the repeatedly exposed.
So is the common cold, so is Ebola, and so is the plague. So what?
All three points sound alarming, but add up to very little, or nothing. Why say them at all?
I feel compelled to point out that Trump has taken pains to make light of the Covid-19 pandemic. I emphatically do not agree with him on this matter, nor on any other matters. He seems to be more concerned over Wall Street & loan interest rates than he is about rates of disease transmission or mortality rates. His responses, and those of his flunkies, are primarily aimed at public relations, not fighting a public health threat.
I do however believe there is great harm in over-reacting because of the widespread fear of Covid-19. That's why I want to keep politics out of this. And that's why I want to stick with "just the facts".