View attachment 269198
Otherwise bright, and some not-too-bright people, are using this financial times graph to make political points about the U.S. corona response in a time of crisis.
Of course if you look at per capita data for cases and deaths, which is the only thing that matters, the USA is not going to be anywhere close to the top of any graph. Europe will be the hardest hit because of an older population that is very densely gathered.
Also, the growth rate for the U.S. is simply inflated by our unique testing lag. I'm no Trump supporter, and he deserves some of the blame for the testing lag (as do Democrats). Ironically, that testing lag caused us to have a more severe reaction to the virus than if we had perfect surveillance because it seemed as though we were fighting an unseen enemy, and that will probably save lives in the long run.
No matter where you are on the political spectrum, now is a good time to build your BS detector when it comes to statistical comparisons presented to underpin predetermined conclusions.