A few other points:
The stuff abotu Farr's Law is interesting but doesn't stack up. For example the article uses data from Oregon but it's out-of-date, see:
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/oregon-coronavirus-cases.html
This shows that there was a downwards trend in late April, but a second peak in May, and indeed there's evidence of a third bump coming in the data for early- to mid-June. Separately, as I have said elsewhere, a good fit for the NHS England Hospital deaths data is not a bell curve but something called a split Voigt distribution, with a long and drawn-out tail. Farr's Law was an interesting and pertinent observation for smallpox but cannot and should not be relied on.
I could continue to pick apart this article -- but, in short, it's misleading, and needlessly patronising, and just broken. There's a lot we don't yet understand about Covid-19, and I am not going to claim that there was no hint of panic in the global reaction. But articles like this don't help anything. The entire tone is also troublesome. Present the data and the evidence, and let them stand or fall on their own merits.
Oh, yes, and one final point: the author of the article advocates the idea that vaccines cause autism. He doesn't know what he's talking about.