Not sure if this was posted yet, but these are so really good charts:
What ultimately matters is what we already knew to be the central concern: the rate of change in caseload and mortality over time.
www.nationalreview.com
Looks like most of our countries follow a similar path.
I find it increasingly difficult to compare countries. The two countries I know most of data-collection wise are the Netherlands and Belgium. In the COVID19 stats Belgium is doing considerably worse than the Netherlands. Today, for example, Belgium reported almost twice the fatalities than the Netherlands. Belgium also has more cases, not just in a relative but also in an absolute sense. That makes intuitively little sense: Belgium also enacted stricter measures, and enacted them earlier, than the Netherlands. And Belgium has a considerably smaller population (11 vs 17 million) What gives?
1) Testing. Belgium started ramping up testing earlier, and tested broader. For the first weeks everyone could just go to the hospital and get tested for free, no questions asked. That resulted in MANY negatives, as every hypochondriac showed up.

In the Netherlands that never was done, since pretty much the start only hospitalized people were tested, and medical staff.
2) Fatality labeling. In Belgium 'suspected COVID19 fatalities' without positive test are counted as COVID19, with the tests being at the lowest priority (they are dead, after all). 2/3 of the reported deaths are these 'suspected' deaths, pretty much all from nursing homes. In the Netherlands only confirmed cases are counted.
When you look at the increase in mortality above the normal average, the Netherlands does
worse. When you look at the official stats, they do
considerably better. It is why comparing countries is next to pointless, and I believe the US is no exception: comparing various states will no doubt be comparing the proverbial apples and pears. Looking at the US as one country also is severely misleading. New York as a state does
far worse than Italy or Spain. Ultra-rural states such as Alaska (~1 person per square mile), Wyoming (6p/m^2) and Montana (7p/m^2) are barely effected at all. To quantify that: per million citizens Spain has 386 deaths, Italy 348, New York 552(!) and Wyoming 2(!). Saying the 'US is average compared with other countries' makes no sense to someone in New York or Wyoming. To the former this is a terrible tragedy, to the latter this is pretty much nothing at all. Its like describing 'the average human body': neither man nor woman would recognize themselves in that picture.