ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
Sammy is right.
With one additional distinction - the ultimate measure of the virus is mortality, not positive cases. If there are major outbreaks that for some reason don't result in a correlating increase in mortality, then a rise in cases now is not equivalent to a rise three months ago. That was, as Sammy notes, bushwhack time. At this point, jurisdictions have been able to protect the elderly and ramp up countermeasures, when necessary - major advantages.
You can't look at a state that has 100 deaths/million rising slowly and conclude that they should follow the model of states that have 1,500 deaths/million. Unless there ends up being that correlation. There probably shouldn't be, since the nursing homes seem to be key in this war.
There are a lot of factors that relate to success in fighting this disease, and now that more is known using state vs state data isn't going to work to see how to fight this for so many reasons. Culture, population density, political climate, demographics of population, time of first cases and so many other things.
What John is obviously saying here is that trends make a difference in this battle. A rising case load is bad. A descending case load is good. Many states that have fared well so far have to consider when and if they'll put more restrictions in place if case loads grow higher. Many states are now seeing a huge influx of hospital cases. NY got cases down to almost nothing before opening, which is critical to being able to then track and trace and control outbreaks.
Other factors that could help to keep now rising states from having catastrophic mortality rates include access to more effective treatments for severe cases, like the steroid found in the UK study to be very useful to limit severity, as well as younger populations getting the disease on average.
The danger is that people now all over the US are relaxing both restrictions and personnel practices. Opening shops and having people going into indoor areas with groups without masks for whatever reason will mean a danger of big super-spreaders. One guy was responsible for hundreds of cases in South Korea. What's it going to be like when the checkout clerk of a major Wallmart has Covid, or the server at a local restaurant?
Here distancing recommendations have lessened and restaurants and pubs will soon open along with other businesses. Economically this has to happen. Practically and scientifically there is huge risk in it happening now while cases are still relatively high, now just under 1,000 new a day in the UK.
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill