Well written and covers just about everything. I'm guilty of paragraph two. As you know I've been graphing the death rates for over two months now. I'm not much concerned about any surge/spike in cases (yet) until I see a proportional surge/spike in the death death, which I don't yhink will happen...if there is a related increase in the death rate, we likely won't start seeing it until a week or after the start of the surge in cases.
You mention that "graphs can be found that show that the EU, which was hit a week or two before the USA, now has much lower new cases and death rates." I think there are two reasons for the disparity:
1) The US reports any death of a person who had COVID at the time of death as a COVID death, regardless if COVID was the main cause or even just a contributing factor. A person in hospice care who dies with COVID in his/her system "died of COVID" per the government. A car crash victim who is positive for COVID is treated as a COVID death. I'm not aware of any other country that does this.
2) EU countries have a suspiciously-low death rate. Germany has almost exactly a quarter of our population but had a grand total of nine deaths yesterday (Jun 25) while we had 649 (1.4% of our death tool). France, which has a population almost exactly 20% of ours, but had only 21 deaths on Jun 25 (3.2% of our death toll). Spain, with a popluation of almost 47,000,000 had grand total of three deaths yesterday. Are you fucking shitting me? And lastly, Italy, which was the initila hot bed in Europe, has a population of just over 60,000,000 and had 34 deaths yesterday. So, the four most-populous EU countries, which a combined population of over 256,000,000 (almost 78% of ours) had a grand total of 67 deaths (10.3% of ours). Conversely, brexited UK has a population of just over 21% of ours, yet had 149 deaths yesterday (23% of our death tool, and way over what Germany, France, Spain, and Italy combined had).