I was looking around, you know because I didn't see anyone other country experiencing Covid-19, and found this:
Europe battles to contain surge in Covid-19 cases
https://www.ft.com/content/bcddc297-b7f2-444d-908f-54e8ce6f4f98
It is weird because I thought other countries had it figured out. I was oblivious to the thought that maybe the virus travels around the world at varying rates and that eventually it will reach other countries in a similar vein depending on the season, weather, travel, etc.
Maybe we should adopt some of the stringent measures the real successful countries are trying like closing their bars at 1 am and making people stay 5 feet apart?
First sentence of the article:
"Public health officials are sounding the alarm over a resurgence of coronavirus cases in Europe
as countries ease lockdowns and international travel ramps up with some experts warning citizens have become too complacent."
Emphasis added.
So, Europe got hit the hardest early, dropped way down in cases and deaths as they implemented "stringent measures", and now is going back up (a bit as will be seen below) as the "stringent measures" are relaxed. Here in the U.S., we got hit hard a bit later, sporadically adopted, on average, less stringent measures for a shorter period and went down a lot less dramatically than Europe did, and are now on the rise again as we've "reopened".
While it's hardly perfect data, I took a look at the Worldometers COVID death count for yesterday (not a Tuesday spike day). The U.S. reported 1,465 deaths (we're #1). All of the 21 European countries that reported deaths (ranking from 18 to 90), combined reported 290 deaths (that includes Russia's 161 deaths even though much of their country is in Asia). While NOBODY here, except for you as a straw man, has claimed that other countries are not experiencing COVID-19, the set of countries that has over twice the population of the U.S. and has fewer than 20% of the deaths during their "surge" than we do (fewer than 10% is you exclude Putin's dysfunctional Russia) just might be responding better than we are.
EDIT: Since I was curious, since March 25, when the U.S. first exceeded 290 daily reported COVID deaths, we've only had fewer than 290 COVID deaths on 4 days, three Sundays (June 21 (271) and 28 (286), and July 5 (266), and Saturday, July 4 (269)), all days on which deaths were likely reported under reported to the typical weekend reporting lag that lowers weekend numbers and increases Monday and Tuesday numbers (the combined average for the Mondays and Tuesdays following those dates were well over 500).