Is this because it went on for so long? Because people don't connect it to future threats? Because it was polarized? Other reasons?
Is this topic worth doing survey research on?
It seems very important to understand for biorisk and perhaps other areas like AI safety, where people frequently refer to "warning shots" as events that could shift what's possible.
I think this is definitely an interesting question, and I can see how it has some strategic value for organisations doing scenario planning for the future.
As far as I'm aware (based on conversations with people closer to US government than me) there was an element of "pandemic fatigue" in US government. The government was painfully aware that they had spent a huge amount on COVID already. Proposals to spend even more on an "Apollo programme" or other efforts to ensure we don't have this problem again didn't seem appealing, because some many other priorities had been put on hold and were vying for attention.
I don't remember hearing much about polarisation being an important driver.