I'll take Georgia as an example, since I live here.
You would look at the 94% number and see something to really worry about there. Yet you ignore the fluctuation in the graph, particularly in the fact that the overall number of ICU beds changes regularly. Somehow the state of Georgia had 2951 beds back in February, but currently only has 2694 listed by Johns Hopkins. That's a difference of 257 beds. That difference, if they were brought back into play, would push Georgia's utilization percentage down to 86%, much better than 94%. Not fantastic, but not nearly as scary.
This is where your fixation on percentages really is just a number to cause panic. Back at the end of February (22-28 Feb), the percent of utilization in Georgia was at 81%. The following week (Mar 1-7) the percentage stayed the same at 81%. You would look at this and be like, man things still sucked in Georgia, and somehow completely miss the fact that the number of beds dropped from 2855 total beds to 2446 beds. That's 409 beds for those who can't do it in their head or don't want to break out the old calculator. Paying attention to that should help you realize that even though the numbers might look all doom and gloom, when they need to they can find beds.
We can all agree that it sucks, but as Baron showed, the numbers for vaccination in FL are not terrible. People ignore the fact that people still continue to travel from out of state to Florida for vacation, which means some of you assholes stop for gas and food in Georgia with your Covid monkey selves, spreading it everywhere. But we are staying open anyway. Per the Georgia Department of Public Health numbers, non-Georgia residents are currently #7 in the state for confirmed cases, #6 in confirmed deaths, and #11 in hospitalizations, so thanks for that, I guess.