COVID-19 Outbreak Information Updates (Reboot) [over 150.000,000 US cases (est.), 6,422,520 US hospitilizations, 1,148,691 US deaths.]

When it comes to Covid, the United States specializes in denialism. Deny the human-to-human transmission of the virus when China’s first cases were publicized in late 2019. Deny that the virus is airborne. Deny the need for boosters across all adult age groups. There are many more examples, but now one stands out – learning from other countries.

In early 2020, with the major outbreak in the Lombardy region of Italy that rapidly and profoundly outstripped hospital resources and medical staffing, Americans expressed confidence that it won’t happen here. That it couldn’t happen here. And then it did.

Fast forward two years of the pandemic: the United Kingdom and Europe have provided five unmistakable warnings to America that a new surge was occurring.

Within weeks, each time, the United States experienced a new wave, some not as severe (such as with the Alpha variant), some worse (Delta and Omicron variants).

From this Covid track record over two years, it is palpable: what happens in the UK and Europe doesn’t stay in the UK and Europe…….

https://www.theguardian.com/comment...-of-a-fresh-covid-wave?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
AT the same token, it's odd how their waves come back so fast. This feels like how up north Delta was still working through the US when Omicron showed up. Maybe this is the BA.2 version of Omicron in Europe, but we'll see. I expect it to come here, but will it be a major wave or not? we'll see. I do wonder why some European countries seem to spike so fast..