I understand your frustration with a bleak situation - and I personally am frustrated too - probably more so. But, that's not going to change the reality around us. We are not seeing 3,000 people die of emotional and economic damage - or of a deterioration in quality of life. You can come out of a depression and recover from the emotional toil. Death unfortunately is permanent.
We speak of the balance between economic freedom and public health - between lockdowns and jobs. Well, in the US, there hasn't been a true lockdown at any time in this pandemic. We had (and now have again) a few states taking matters in their own hands, but nationally it's been a free-for-all. We have been - so to speak - throwing bandages at a disease We are also quick to demonize anyone wanting to take a harder stance.
And there is nothing to show for it. This is the third wave - the largest yet. Nearly 3,000 daily deaths are at hand. The GDP and job numbers are in the toilet. Careers, as you note, are getting decimated. Politicians are fighting. And there is little hope until a mass vaccination - by when expect a few more industries to disappear and a few hundred thousand more graves to appear. Why is the simple truth lost on so many? You cannot have an economic recovery until this virus is gone. You want jobs? Show this virus the door first.
Messaging of hope is great. It hasn't worked so far this year, but maybe third time is the charm! The right approach - the only approach short of a mass vaccination - is to lock down everything for a month and pay everyone a check to stay at home. Do it nationally - with aggressive testing and contact tracing. While there is no evidence of a whilly whally, half-hearted containment path to recovery, there is plenty of evidence why a decisive approach works. You avert a public health crisis BECAUSE OF WHICH your economy gets a jump start. Here are three examples.
The epicenter:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/18/business/china-economy-covid.html
Well, give me an eye roll - I know. How about South Korea?
https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/09/1...conomic-impact-recession-south-korea-success/
If you insist on 'G-7', check out Japan, which has less than 2,500 total COVID deaths to show to date.
https://www.bbc.com/news/business-54955484
To be clear, no one is out of the woods yet. The virus is still very much raging. What we do see is that if you are able to contain this virus, you begin to have your economic freedom back. These two problems are intertwined - you can't solve one without solving the other.