This is what I don't understand from people, especially a media dude like Clay Travis who originally said "I'll be surprised if the US has more than 3500 deaths from this."
If we come in under projection, doesn't it mean the social distancing likely worked in flattening the curve? We're dealing with it longer via quarantine and restrictions, but the projected death tolls don't reach the potential peaks that were theorized.
Some states aren't in lockdown, but that doesn't mean the overall effort hasn't been effective, especially in places where it's been taken seriously. My friends in public service in Cincy are worried that isolation will be relied on for TOO long, but won't deny that the lockdown prevented a crisis in Cincinnati hospitals just based on people that would have had to be brought in with respiratory issues, had it spread unchecked with no social effort to curb the virus.
I guess I don't get people that want to celebrate the projections being "wrong" when the whole point of everything is to make sure they ARE wrong.
There are people out there who originally said "this is all dumb and unecessary"... 10 million people could die, and certain people would crow about being right or vindicated because the total wasn't 11 million.