In the wake of such suffering, there is no way to adequately explain the tragedy. Yet the seemingly random nature of the mass deaths has made them even harder for the survivors to understand.
“In a situation like this, it’s only natural to want to assign blame,” said Dr. Frederick MacDougal of the National Center for Infectious Diseases, who recently lost a third cousin to a degenerative nerve disorder. “But the disturbing thing about this case is that no one factor is at fault. People are dying for such a wide range of reasons—gunshot wounds, black-lung disease, falls down elevator shafts—that we have been unable to isolate any single element as the cause.”
“No one simple explanation can encompass the enormous scope of this problem,” MacDougal added. “And that’s very difficult for most people to process psychologically.”
[...]
Meanwhile, as the world continues to grapple with this seemingly unstoppable threat, the deaths—and the sorrow, fear and pain they have wrought—continue.
As Margaret Heller, a volunteer at a clinic in Baltimore put it, “We do everything we can. But for most of the people we try to help, the sad truth is it’s only a matter of time.”
-- The Onion, Millions and Millions Dead
Related: World Death Rate Holding Steady At 100 Percent