Latest Coronavirus - Yikes

I don't understand what the chart is illustrating.

Well the blue states were UT's Sal Sunseri's defense. Then Sal got fired and someone bragged about the drastic improvement in the defense the following year.

Versus, the red states, which were Bama's defense and how it shows very little improvement from year to year.
 
I read it as Republican districts have done better than Democratic ones. Significantly better and across the timeline of the pandemic.
So many variables. I think it would be almost impossible to compare and contrast the two adequately.
 
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Well the blue states were UT's Sal Sunseri's defense. Then Sal got fired and someone bragged about the drastic improvement in the defense the following year.

Versus, the red states, which were Bama's defense and how it shows very little improvement from year to year.
Or it could be the urban vs rural argument, in that urban areas peaked sooner and rural areas are more of a slow burn.
 
For those interested, here is what my data projections are showing for daily new cases for the next few weeks.
This is the first sign of a change from the gradual descent which the data has suggested until now, but obviously it isn't too worrying if the new case data follows this brief plateau.

projections.JPG
I am still seeing a lower plateau just under 10k in July, but it wouldn't be surprising if we stayed around this current level. As some here pointed out yesterday, such a plateau would be positive as long as it is confined to healthier populations.

Caveat: we are obviously balanced on the knife's edge right now, so things could go in either direction. A lot of the variables are quite stable right now though.
 
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