Presenting this as factual is dishonest and irresponsible. No one knows the fatality rate of this virus.
There's the virus itself, and then there's the medical care.
In my state of Victoria here in Australia, we've had about 1,400 cases and 15 deaths. An international study has said our testing is catching at least 84% of the infected, maybe up to 92%. So the death rate is a bit under 1%. But... we're talking about, for example this weekend, 30 people in hospital, 12 of whom in intensive care. And the state had ~500 ICU beds before this, we're building 4,500 more. And we're looking at ~10 new cases a day.
In other words, every covid-19 patient in my state can get early access to medical care, and if they need critical or intensive care, they get it, the staff aren't overwhelmed, no medicines are running out, and so on. If it's physically possible to stop that person getting really sick, or physically possible to stop that really sick person dying, they'll manage it. Contrast this with this ICU nurse's story from NYC.
https://kristenfmartins.wordpress.com/2020/04/17/shit-is-real/It's like saying, "What's the death rate of someone who has a cardiac arrest?" Well, if there is just me with first aid and one casualty we get one figure. Now we add an AED and the figure improves. Now we add paramedics within 10 minutes and the figure improves more, still. Okay, now we add a second person having a heart attack, and there's still just me, the AED and the single pair of paramedics. Now let's add a third. And so on.
What's the death rate of someone who has covid-19? Well, it depends. Is there one patient, or 10,000? And that's why Australia did the lockdown: not only so there'd be less people infected, but so that more of those who are infected will survive.
Now, obviously we can talk about particular lockdown measures (my state has closed playgrounds but keeps park water fountains open, which is the wrong way around), and we can talk about their other costs (suicides rise with unemployment, marriages break up, substance abuse increases). But it keeps the number of infected down, and it improves the survival rate of the infected, because the medical system doesn't get overwhelmed.