ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
Randolph County, Georgia, is adjacent to Dougherty County, where that well-publicized (and oft-discussed here) funeral outbreak occurred in February. The cases have largely died down there - it's been holding steady at 19 deaths for many days or even weeks now. That is "old news" - it doesn't represent a rural/semi-rural outbreak that's just developing.
It is simply one of several counties in the US and about 5-6 IIRC in Georgia that have higher than 2% detected infection rates. I am showing how much this may have impacted certain communities, and on the positive side, how some of them might be close to herd immunity if the multiplication of undetected cases is as high as some scientists have stated recently.
So before you go out again assuming negativity, have a think and read more closely. No one is "calling out the South" and you don't have to defend it. The South, whatever that loosely defined area is nowadays, is diverse and different areas are being impacted differently by this pandemic, often because control has been taken by counties rather than states or federally mandated measures. Seeing that more clearly is interesting.








