// People telling us all to ‘be afraid’ and banging on about the millions who have already died when in fact worldwide the figure is under 2 million - and no mention of the 46 plus million who have recovered. Yes, it’s gloom and doom mongering. No other words for it. //
The figure of 2 million is (a) almost certainly an undercount based on deaths to date, (b) certainly not the final total of the pandemic, and (c) still pretty scary. When you compare it to total annual deaths worldwide it's an excess of about 4% -- and, in fact, that itself is misleading, because it doesn't take into account that Covid-19 hasn't taken hold in Africa (1.3 billion), China (1.4 billion), and "only" about 150,000 deaths in India (1.4 billion), the global excess this year is closer to 10%. That's significant.
The 46 million who have recovered so far is presumably also an undercount, because it only takes into account known cases with known outcomes (aside: there are no official "recovery" figures in the UK). As welcome as it is, though, it's also very misleading: "recovered" merely means not dead, but doesn't appear to take into account those who are suffering from long Covid.
It's also by no means the first time that you've attempted to make the same point. I'm curious -- doesn't the need to continually update the total deaths undermine that point? It would make sense only at the end of the crisis, and, frankly, not even then, to focus on the recovered rather than the dead. Humanity isn't going to end as a result of Covid-19, but that's such a low criterion to judge its threat.
If Covid-19 isn't brought under control and time soon, then the total number of deaths it causes worldwide will exceed 10 million easily. That's especially likely if we give up trying to control it. Hopefully, the vaccine will be rolled out fast enough to stop that from happening.
But, quite simply, you have to take the threat seriously in order to deal with it. It's a lesson you seem determined not to heed.