Medicare is an insurance company. It doesn't happen to medicare. I could explain you the mechanisms but you seem intent on refusing to understand them.
I'm not refusing to understand them, I'm refusing to listen to your explanations of how insurance does its thing with regards to insurance because you refuse to tell me how insurance does its things with regards to the actual cost of healthcare. I'm not talking about how much people pay for insurance, I'm talking about how much hospitals and etc.
charge.
Consider this:
The amount that hospitals, etc. charge for services is incredibly high when compared to other countries.
Insurance costs are based mostly (not entirely) on healthcare rates established by hospitals, etc.
I'm trying to argue that the core issue here is healthcare, and you're trying to argue that the core issue here is insurance. However, from where I'm standing, insurance is dependent on healthcare, not the other way around. I acknowledge the possibility that insurance might be able to exert pressure on the medical industry to reduce the cost of healthcare which would then reduce the cost of insurance, but I cannot see how, which is what I've asked you to clarify. Without that piece of information, I fail to see how insurance costs are the most important issue and how the ACA is properly cutting healthcare costs (that is, what hospitals charge, not necessarily what consumers pay).
That's why this conversation is frustrating: I keep talking about healthcare costs and how I don't see how insurance influences them, and you keep talking about insurance. The only time you've referenced how insurance affects healthcare is with that "downward pressure" bit which you did not elaborate on yet, which is quite frankly the only piece of information I care about for what you've said because the rest does not address how insurance is a greater issue than healthcare costs considering insurance is dependent on healthcare costs. That is, I don't see how you can even argue your case unless you establish dependency both ways and establish that healthcare is dependent enough on insurance that prices could be lowered to rates similar to those in other countries, OR that you establish that insurance is not dependent on healthcare but healthcare is dependent on insurance, OR you establish just that insurance is not dependent on healthcare and then we're left not really being able to come to a similar conclusion.