Quite wrong.
Sure - there is a significant number of asymptomatic cases, and they seem to be quite fine (other then infecting others).
However - most people who do get the symptoms describe it more like "being hit by a bus". Think a pretty bad flu ... and if you just check that the average time to suffer from this virus is around 28 days - this is clearly worse than the flu. Ask your big hero Boris ... I hear he had a near death experience.
Some people (including healthy athletes) do suffer for months under weakness / heart conditions and continue to do so. Whether they will fully recover - nobody knows (due to the short time the virus is so far around):
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-...ng-months.html
A significant percentage of the patients who had been hospitalised suffer under heart damage (well above 10% according to several studies - check link below), blood clots (including stroke), lung damage, neurological symptoms:
https://www.advisory.com/daily-brief...health-effects
And a not insignificant number of people in risk groups are dying (from memory still around 10% in the group above 80). Risk groups are people of old age (70+), people with diabetes, people with immune deficiencies, people with heart conditions and similar (
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019...onditions.html). Roughly one third of the population.
Listening to your posts (the few I still read) you sound like somebody who does not care for other people - and you probably don't have friends either, i.e. nobody you care for would be at risk. However, just wondering - we all grow older and for you (male, white, privileged and around the 60ķes) is it another 10 years or so until you end up to be in the high risk group.
I take it that you would not mind if society would at that stage risk your health and life? Or is it just the health of other people you don't care about?