This is missing D-Day (2500+) and the 1918 pandemic's October, where enough died that likely several days would have made the count.
But it's also missing that last Thursday was probably around 3,100 dead according the IHME.
And you get the idea. There is a good chance that every one of those spots will be filled by COVID-19 except for #1 - I doubt Galveston will be exceeded, but certainly not pushed off the list, even if beaten. I pray.
What exactly is your point in figuratively comparing apples and oranges?
According to the CDC here are the top causes of deaths per year in the USA.
Heart disease: 655,381
Cancer: 599,274
Accidents (unintentional injuries): 167,127
Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 159,486
Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 147,810
Alzheimer’s disease: 122,019
Diabetes: 84,946
Influenza and pneumonia: 59,120
Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 51,386
Intentional self-harm (suicide): 48,344
It figures out to an average of about 5,800 a day.
Get a grip.
Even if you attribute all 285,000 deaths SOLELY to COVID( which is not true) the average is about 850 a day.
(a) Pretty funny to be lectured about apples to oranges, then see what your post includes.
(b) Yes, all 285,000 deaths are COVID-19, despite your efforts to occlude the issue.
(c) As previously established, places like Florida
deliberately undercounted the deaths.
(d) From first death from COVID-19 to now is 304 days. That would be 937.5 deaths per day, but going from first death in a disease is a pretty stupid way to calculate. Further, 285k is a pretty low number to use for this given that the disease hasn't stopped killing yet.
(e) We've pushed to address accidental deaths from cars by changing the laws. That includes fines for not wearing seatbelts. Why are masks different to you?
(f) Most of want restrictions on the cause of a huge chunk of suicide deaths, too. You're opposed. "Go death!" says Ward.
(g) Your post is even more pointless and stupid than you think mine is.