You lock down liquor stores in Ohio you have a whole other set of problems. Haha.
If you open up testing at a drive thru you will have a panic rush to get tested. It would make the toilet paper mania look like nothing.
But - IF you can figure out a way to do it orderly where you aren't increasing likelihood of spreading the virus and IF we have enough tests and IF we aren't taking medical personnel away from people who are sick and need care, I'm fine with it.
There's nothing stopping us from testing everybody in the US in a pretty rapid manner.
The most important thing is figuring out who to start with. This could be start of a strategy to putting people back to work more quickly than we currently can without data.
There are test that are less than $10. But let's go with the $100 test. Because the US is silly at everything about this. But also because testing has a wide variation in sensitivity and specificity right now because of so many manufacturers.
$100 test for 300 million Americans means $30 billion.
We're spending a trillion or two on a shotgun approach because we can't be surgical.
As I see it the biggest limitation is simply manufacturing capacity of those tests versus the current onslaught because we waited so long to start creating those tests. As such by the time I create the test we have too much exponential spread. So you're forced to shelter in place anyway.
But don't totally discount broad testing. This is a very serious part of getting us back to work and life faster than doing it in a blind trickle.
Ideally such broad testing would look like a combination of modalities.
Drive-thru testing at home testing would both be of major importance.
I would think you'd probably have to start with the younger crowd. They are the most mobile and the most asymptomatic. They're also most likely to be job producers. So you'd have to come up with some strategy to test that crowd And you could sign off that they have the green light to move around. They could also be employed and temporary assistance positions so that as people recover or find out they were asymptomatic infections they become useful for all those old people that need to not catch this until there is a vaccine.
I'm kind of waxing poetic here but you get the idea. Broad testing is not unaffordable. It's just a question of strategy. Though I do agree with you based on manufacturing limits it isn't really a solution right now. We just missed the boat.