What’s interesting is he’s basing his contention on the overall statistics of how many infected compared to the population, when in fact Covid generally spreads through clusters, where one person in a group gets it and spreads it through that roof, so multiple family members dying of it, while rare, is more common than he believes just using the raw numbers because generally when one member of a family gets it, they spread it to the rest as opposed to other random families.
As an example, while my father’s side of the family in LA didn’t get it, my Uncle in Texas on my mother’s side got it and it spread through him to my Aunt, to my cousins and their husbands and their children. My cousin’s husbands’ father died of Covid, but thankfully no one else.