<sigh> As do millions of people, every day, for a myriad of reasons. If someone lost a loved one as a direct result of Covid, then I am not at all surprised that they would wish restrictions to continue ad infinitum, in various forms, until the thing was all but extinct. But otherwise, frankly, I'm sick of hearing this now near-reflexive response from large parts of the public at large, and I'm especially sick of our governments failing to retain a sense of objective proportion in the face of that.
People dying is self-evidently tragic, as we all know. But arbitrarily redrawing the very boundaries of millions of people's lives, and forcibly curtailing normal, everyday activities that are not and never have been the business of the state requires - I'll say it again - an acknowledgment of proportion that to my mind seems utterly lacking.
The Covid response has, to my mind, been to a degree disproportionate for a number of months, but now is certainly way over the line, fuelled by a monomaniacal obsession with Covid that is not justified by the relative severity of the problem. I'm sorry if you find that "heartless" or whatever, but it remains my opinion.