Here is the NC Threat-Free Index for the week ending April 19:
- As of April 19, there were 911,719 North Carolinians presumed to be recovered from COVID-19
- Active cases comprised just 2.7% of NC’s total case count (note: a case of COVID isn’t a permanent infection, and only someone with an active case of the virus can conceivably transmit it to you)
- Active cases represented about 0.2% (two-tenths of one percent) of NC’s population (note: active cases are lab-confirmed cases of COVID-19 minus recoveries and deaths)
- Meanwhile, 24 out of every 25 (96.0%) of NC’s total cases were recovered, meaning they are no longer infectious
- Only about 0.1% of people in NC had died with COVID-19 (regardless of the actual cause of death)
- Meanwhile, 91.1% people in NC had never had a lab-confirmed case of COVID-19, despite the PCR test cycle threshold set so high as to produce a large amount of false positives (note: this proportion will always decline, but we have been living with this virus since February 2020, as far as testing is concerned)
- All things considered, about 99.8% of people in NC posed no threat of passing along COVID-19 to anyone — a virus most had never had and the rest had recovered from (note: this proportion will fluctuate based on relative growth in lab-confirmed cases vs. recoveries, and it is likely understand because it does not account for vaccinations)
It’s been over a year. It’s well, well, well past time for the governor to end this open-ended “emergency” rule.