gobrowns33
Footballguy
I thought you were in Florida, the least-"locked down" state in the union, no?
...
Anyway, I think you're looking through the binoculars the wrong way: commerce in full, especially in the service industry, returns when the customers as a collective feel comfortable enough to come back in numbers. It's not simply the government or some overarching power forcing consumers to stay home en masse -- the issue of returning back to 2019 normal has a lot more to do with getting a sense of ease out there among a strong majority of the body public.
As an aside: more individuals than you might imagine were and have been concerned about putting themselves in a grave just as much as "Grandma and Grandpa". I think more Americans that work hard to avoid COVID are motivated internally than motivated externally (by mandates, "lockdowns", etc.).
In Georgia, we never locked down after the first 3-4 weeks of this thing. I figured FL was about the same. School has been full in person in many places, restaurants fully running...I guess maybe theaters are not fully operating or professional sports stadiums/arenas. But other than that, not much to re-open, so percentage of vaccinations has no bearing.
Now I know parts of GA are somewhat still shut...I think Atlanta is one. It bugs me watching the news talking about all the steps they need to do, vaccininations, yadda yadda to open the ATL schools...when my wife has been full-time in person teaching all year and my three kids in-person school all year w/ minimal hiccups. They don't even acknowledge whole area/counties running full-up school and all the efforts they put in place to make it happen. The good news stories like that is against the narrative...