I'm still waiting for someone to articulate a viable third solution to what is, was and always will be a binary problem. There are two choices: unsustainable draconian lock downs until the risk of the virus is eradicated, or a return to semi-normal where we live with the risk. Cuomo can point to places like AZ all he wants but what does he think is going to happen in NYC when things reopen?
There was a great observation made on the local sports talk station yesterday where the hosts totally summarized this issue: "Golfers in the U.S. are saying that they are not going to observe "protocols," like staying locked in their rooms when they come back, whereas in the German soccer league you get suspended for going out to buy toothpaste."
Yes, our big mistake was not having firm nationwide protocols.
Where I live, masks are not required for the general public - no matter where they are. Individual businesses can require them, but no one is doing that because there are too many anti-maskers.
If we did just one simple thing, such as require masks for everyone in public places (and face shields at restaurants), the rates would go much lower, until CoVid was mostly or entirely in our rear view window.
As it is, we're having an upswing in more than 20 states, and these upticks will continue to rise either gradually or quickly (the New York Times has good information and visuals; IMHE projections are updated regularly and have been both quite accurate in the past month as well as scary).
Summer will end with us at higher rates of infection, just as school is starting. Israel thought they had a handle on CoVid until the schools opened:
After Reopening Schools, Israel Orders Them To Shut If COVID-19 Cases Are Discovered
There is some good news: death rate is falling all over the world and in the US/UK. Also, while the total case rate is sobering, only a fraction of that group is actively shedding virus at this point. Hospitalizations are done most places (Arizona is definitely facing a crisis).
It does look like total viral load is a key variable in transmitting CV19, so people who work in a setting where first one person is shedding virions (even if only through breathing and talking), then 1 more people is infected, then 2 more - the total amount of virus gets high enough that the workplace becomes a hot spot and everyone is exposed. Since it seems that asymptomatic people do shed virus, along with those who have very mild to mild symptoms, it's easy to see how workplaces spread the virus. Masks. Face shields. Hand washing. Social distancing.
It's possible to control this. It's natural for most people to want to avoid this level of risk - even if they are 20. Most people don't want to harm others, either. Most people don't want to be responsible for the death of a grandparent or parent. But, as we know too well here on WS, there are some people who truly just don't care.