One Million and Counting

Over one million Americans have died from COVID-19 since the pandemic began in March of 2020. Of each of those deaths about 9 people are left to morn the loss. COVID-19 has left an estimated 199,000 children in the U.S. without one or both of their parents. Lovers lost a partner. Some partners died within hour of each other unable to see one anoter in the final moments. The toll is incalculable.

Each wave has brought about an endless ticking of loses as people choose to go about life as normal assuming it can never happen to them.

The basic mitigation measure have not changed since the start of the pandemic, masking, washing hands, vaccination and social distancing. Yet this seems too much for many. Masking became a political flash point rather than a simple 50 cent tool to avoid infection. Misinformation convinced so many to avoid vaccines. Since the advent of the vaccines every other life lost could have been saved by that simple shot. It is an absolute tragedy. Over 300.000 could have lived if they only got the primary series of vaccinations.

ABC reported that as of March 25, 2022 about three quarters of the dead, or around 730,000, have been people 65 and older. Many of them were otherwise healthy and, statistically, would have lived many more years, said Jennifer Dowd, a demographer at the University of Oxford. About 240,000 Americans between the ages of 18 and 64 have died, nearly a quarter of the total toll.

As the next wave slowly rolls in, ignorance persists and large indoor gatherings are the norm all over the country. Using my art to keep track of super spreading events has become an exhausting endeavor. It is impossible to keep up. Against this backdrop, testing sites are being closed and it has become impossible to keep track of the rising numbers of aces since people test at home or don’t bother testing since they want to avoid isolating at home. Such devastation has not been seen since World War II, when about 418,000 Americans died. This war is not over.