COVID-19 Outbreak (Update: More than 2.9M cases and 132,313 deaths in US)

You may be right, but I'm a bit skeptical. So who is saying that we don't have the resources to prop up the economy for say 3 or 4 months?

I ask because it was suggested above that the last stimulus could have been used to give every American household $5,500 per month for three months and the next proposed stimulus could have been used to give every American household $6,500 per month for the next three months. I don't know if the numbers are right, but it seems to me that would allow us not got go into a deep depression and allow even those who can't work at all enough to get buy until this thing is really down to almost nothing.

Would that be a good idea? I don't know but I also don't know that anyone has said that it can't be done or that it would be a bad idea for the economy. I mean, it doesn't some much different than the New Deal which is what ended the Great Depression (along with WWII).

As of 2019, there are approximately 129 million households in the United States, giving each $5000 would cost 645 billion dollars per month. Doing so for 3 months would cost in the neighborhood of 1.9 trillion dollars. As it happens, the richest 400 Americans (individuals, not companies) have a net worth of 2.9 trillion dollars. Taking 1.9 trillion dollars from them would leave each of those 400 people a mere 4 billion dollars to try to live on.

Our country has spent over 3 trillion dollars on the Iraqi boondoggle, so it's not like we can't do it if we want to.