Another interesting way of looking at Covid-19 vs. other infectious diseases, specifically the flu. I did a quick check of the math (Disclaimer - I'm not a mathematician.) and the numbers in the article seem to align with the data provided by the CDC. I didn't want anyone to accuse me of blindly accepting information from a single source without checking other sources as well.
Flu deaths vs. coronavirus deaths: These reasons show why Covid-19 can be more dangerous than the flu - CNN
"From October 2019 to early April 2020, the flu killed an estimated 24,000 to 62,000 people in the US, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Those numbers are preliminary, and the CDC said it stopped updating its preliminary estimates for this flu season on April 4.
If 62,000 people died from the flu between October 1 and April 4, that means the US had an average of about 331 flu deaths a day.
By contrast, coronavirus killed more than 62,850 people in the US from the first known death in February through the end of April.
So from February 6 through April 30, an average of more than 739 people died per day from coronavirus in the US."