Absolutely - the US is going to have to face second wave deaths that will make the first wave look like the odd few sick people.
...which I'm sure will be dutifully blamed on Obama, Hillary Clinton, corrupt healthcare workers, China, the mainstream media, and all the other usual suspects. The present administration seems perfectly content to suffer casualties as long as blame for it can be shifted.
...encouraging people to break quarantine. On the other hand, there seems to be a significant number of people who actually believe him or hoax theories that have been floated.
A rally was held in my city a day or so ago in which it is estimated a crown of 1,000 people gathered in a city park in defiance of the city's and county's stay-at-home order. This was the "Live Free or Die" sort of crowd. The photos of the event showed a fair number of the yellow colonial-era "Don't Treat on Me" flags. (We have a large flag manufacturing company in the valley whose owner is emphatically on the political right.) The excerpts of the speakers' statements reported in the newspaper included exactly the rhetoric you allude to: the virus is a hoax, it was created in a lab in the U.S. or China, it's no more contagious or lethal than the common cold, the whole thing is a government power-grab, etc.
The Trump administration seems to have abandoned claims of hoax, at least in the sense of acknowledging now that it's a real phenomenon. Their rhetorical has moved from "This is nothing to worry about" to "We're doing very well at addressing the problem," and blaming others for their having been slow out of the gate and for allegedly fabricating facts that dispute their self-congratulatory attitude.
Is it schadenfreude to savor the irony that some of those same people will die from their own stupidity?
If the virus were harder to transmit, and its effects more immediate, then a moral evaluation would be simpler. But since it's so easily transmissible and takes a long time to produce symptoms, it remains the case that irresponsible carriers will pose a risk to far more people than just themselves until they realize that they are infected. The quarantine orders allow for essential public activity, but any public activity entails the risk of exposure. If more people gather, becoming infected, and then move about in public among those who have limited their activities to the essential ones, they effectively raise the risk of necessary encounters for everyone. Even repentant carriers won't fall ill immediately and then quickly know to quarantine themselves, hence we all have to stay quarantined until we know who's sick and who isn't.
So for me it's not
Schadenfreude to imagine the far-reaching consequences of behavior like rallies. Having endured one of the moderately nasty prior hCoV viruses myself, I don't want to repeat the experience or wish it on anyone else. But here I just don't see it as a case of irresponsible behavior being limited in its consequences to those who engaged in it. It's not Just Desserts, because the collateral effects of rallies and smaller-scale disobedience reach those who don't deserve it.