Or, alternatively, they could just let the thing run, get herd immunity, and be done with it.
COVID just doesn't kill that many people as a percentage of the population, particularly not the young, manufacturing-worker population.
The world has been reacting as if this was on a par with the Black Plague. It isn't. Not even close.
TCS
We are of exactly the same mindset on this.
Two unreported facts since we've changed presidents: More fatalities have occurred under the new administration than under the previous one, in a shorter time period, and with vaccines available.
Second, the fatality rate from influenza is greater than covid. Or better stated, the fatality rate of covid, in the US, has fallen below that of the flu. No doubt because of the vaccines, treatments like Paxlovid, and as
@Chaosrider mentions, herd immunity, chiefly because of the relatively mild Omicron mutation.
There is no scientifically valid reason to continue any covid policy distinct from general health policy that addresses common infectious diseases like influenza, and rhinovirus (common cold).
And I beg all of you to not make this political. This post is not pro/anti Trump or Biden. It's about the facts right now concerning COVID epidemiology. The best thing that could have happened was not the vaccine, the new antivirals, treatment protocols, quarantines, or anything else we've tried and done in the last 2+ years... no the end of COVID as a unique concern was...
Omicron