Has the number of people who died from this strain broken a hundred yet? What's the current rate of fatality as we know it right now, at this moment, with the available data? As far as I can tell, we're still
well below your estimated fatality rate, and you've yet to quantify how you're reaching such a high number outside of guessing.
Slaughtering whole pig populations, holding Mexican citizens in quarantine against their will, and government public statements urging citizens to stay away from Mexico aren't worthwhile examples? How many do you need and at what severity of the behavior will reach the bar you've set?
Here, let me help you:
CDC: Maybe Schools Shouldn't Close
Outbreak of Flu is Less Severe Than Feared
My suggestion for starting to have some balance here in this thread is to start re-evaluating your position based on the re-evaluations the major health organizations are doing. The reason I suggest this is because the "we don't know for sure" argument falls way too short-- there is never 100% certainty with things like this pandemic, and waiting until near-100%-certainty will
definitely cause problems. That's why these health organizations operate from a "what we know right now" group of data. Not for nothing, but you might want to give it a shot.