The kung-flu has been insanely random from the beginning. Senior citizens with health issues have gotten it and recovered with no issues, and healthy young people have gotten it and (practically) fallen over dead. My wife has repository problems, and we are pretty sure she has had it twice, once early on before they were testing, and once later on when the test came back negative but it was thick in her school and she and several around her had all the same symptoms, yet still got negative tests.
People are different. They respond differently to stuff. Between running rideshare through much of this pandemic, as well as being the one who went to the grocery store during shut downs, plus again, the disease has been thick in my wife's school last year and already this year, I'm sure I've been exposed, but never gotten anything. One would think the "diversity" crowd at the DUmp would understand such variables in people, but they only like big words when match the handed down talking points.
And then unfriended the family member. God, they're stupid.
1. Boy am I overdue! I tested positive on January 13th and I'm still around.
2. The <<1% of those who do die typically do so 2-3 weeks after testing positive.
3. Don't be fooled by the <<1% die number. For many more, recovery is no picnic (~4% hospitalization, IIRC). BTDTGTT.
If the left actually had a brain, they would focus more on #3 there for their panic porn. Not sure what the numbers are on long term recovery effects (partly cause we still aren't far enough into the disease to know long term effects yes, just like the jab) but there are significant amounts of extended recovery times and damage to lungs afterwards.