Here's the problem with that, Karen...and it's a problem you won't even acknowledge because of what it means for your thinking:
Let's say Karen here doesn't want to abide by the stay at home order. So Karen goes and gets her hair done on Monday, goes to the nail salon Tuesday, goes to get a massage Wednesday, and then goes bowling on Thursday. So Karen has exposed herself to the disease for four days in a row. On Friday, she decides to go to the grocery store, which is the same day I decide to go to the store after spending Mon-Thu isolated in my home. Let's say that the supermarket both Karen and I go to is enacting social distancing policies, but for one reason or another, either the carts weren't wiped down and sanitized properly, the products Karen touches or breathes on before I touch them aren't cleaned, or the workers at the Supermarket accidentally bump into Karen as she's buying her hot pockets. So for the whole week, I was good, didn't go outside, self-isolated, and protected myself from the virus, but all that gets undone by one simple trip to the supermarket because of Karen's blatant disregard for everyone else's safety.