Two years in, with everything worse than ever. Record breaking cases in places with the highest vax rates and most draconian mitigation measures. Hard to blame people for deciding to live in the moment when nothing else has worked.
The problem is that despite whatever measures are in place, it is up to people to follow through.
Here is what I have seen from the trenches of always-on-the-frontline NYC.
We have very strict laws about vaccine proof before entering any indoor establishment. We have a fairly high vaccination rate. We have mandatory masking.
In reality the only ones following these laws are the people who take Covid seriously. Each time.
From massive NYC events to the stores on my block and even in my apartment building of 23 stories, some follow the laws and some don't.
We have neighbors entering the elevators and lobby who aren't wearing masks; this despite our state, our city and my apartment complex all having rules and laws mandating masks indoors.
Every restaurant here has signs saying no entry without masks and that vaccination proof is required. But my friends who do go indoors (I don't) say that no one really checks. The owners lost money over these two years and don't want to turn away customers.
Even in my own doctor's office, where I had to go, there were patients and the doctor's own receptionist with their masks on their chins. For which I raised hell.
Then, despite de Blasio instituting all these laws about masks and vaccine proof, and our governor too who replaced Cuomo, they still allowed Santa-con here. That brought people from everywhere who crowded the streets and then went drinking, obviously maskless, in every bar in Manhattan. There was the Anime-Con that started the surge in NYC although we were going to get it one way or another. It goes without saying that there are people arriving here from all over the world and a negative test is either not steadily done in real life or it's inaccurate. They bring Covid here and they bring it back to their cities, states and countries.
Every second of every day in NYC there are crowds indoors and out, without the scrupulous checking of our "draconian" requirements.
People want to go out and the stores, restaurants, bars and massive venues like stadiums want customers.
So it's a mirage. If what was preached was in fact practiced, we wouldn't always be the epicenter.
IMO