Because whole Europe's is low? Hey, I have a fresh data for you. "Random testing in Indiana shows COVID-19 is 6 times deadlier than flu, and 2.8% of the state has been infected" So the infection spread is around 3%, and you said it was close to herd immunity (60%). And yes, it is way deadlier than the flu, although the deadliness is probably varies by locations.
But Sweden had no lockdown----the virus should be running rampant there. Why are the numbers so low now?
no news on sweden. Sweden is rural country and pop. is scatterered around in small towns. most of the infections is the major cities or downtowns etc.
1. Except nursing homes were most of the death occurred, their numbers were always fairly low. 2. Swedish people social distance naturally, even without Covid. If 3 people are waiting for a bus, they are 6+ feet apart. Also no generations living together. Thus if the young gets it they don't pass it to their grandparents. Additionally, their current death numbers aren't that low. Today they had 10 deaths, compared to much bigger countries, France 7, Germany 2, Italy 9. By absolute numbers today they are in the top 3 among European countries. So you were wrong again with your assumption.
Again Apples and Oranges. I'm not asking if Sweden's numbers are lower than other countries in this question. Rather, I am asking why Sweden's numbers are so low now versus what they were before. So far, there has not been a response that addresses that.
Because when Vikings get the sniffles, they don't run to the nearest doctor and ask for a COVID test. They tough it out. If some of them die in the Lappland, they get buried under huge piles of stones in the forest.
I am kind of getting tired of educating you. Everything you know is wrong, take that from here. ---------------------------------- In other, ontopic news: "Dr. Scott Gottlieb told CNBC on Wednesday the U.S. may see over double the current deaths from the coronavirus by year-end if current trends were to persist." I should have his job because I predicted the exact same number, but 6-8 weeks ago.
Same area, 1/10 the population. Montana only has 22 total death to date compare to British Columbia's 189 or Alberta's 174?