Don't misunderstand me, I think that overall it is positive but far from what we need end-game. I have trouble fully supporting a thing that hurts so many people. We can't reduce healthcare to a set of scales where we have more people helped than not so hey, good job. People-as-numbers is how we got here, and I don't think It's a bad thing to admit that ACA needs improvement badly.
God, please, spare us.
Here's a sincere question that I am shocked has not already been asked: is the state of Healthcare, right now, so horrifically bad that it is worth the cost (in time and political will as much as money!) spent hammering out a new system, muscling it through a hysterical Congress and a bipolar President, and spending years implementing? Can we not imagine anything else Congress more pressing that Congress could be doing? Or is the state of healthcare so utterly catastrophic that Congress repeatedly flinging itself unto the spikes of legislative failure for over six months is actually worth it? Democrats want to introduce single-payer, a massive shift in Healthcare; why?! was implementing Obamacare not sufficiently painful? Republicans want to simply gut the whole damn thing; why?!? Is it so god-damned horrible that pulling the rug out from everyone is necessary?
I'm sure everyone here can provide personal examples of the current healthcare system not working, but I bet that if I asked you all "what do you think is the most pressing and urgent issue that should be addressed by Congress?" you would still be unlikely to rank "reforming/repealing/replacing/whatevering Obamacare" at the top. Healthcare needs (further!) reform. Of course it does. So does everything else!
Our healthcare system is horrifically expensive and embarrassingly bad. We've talked about the human costs enough in this thread so I'll just talk money. The US military is ludicrously well funded, I *believe* having more money in it than the entire rest of the world's military's combined. This is fueled by the "iron triangle" of the military, congress, and lobbyists all working together to keep our military spending high. They've been long blamed by many people for a variety of America's ills. Just keep this in mind for what I'm about to say next.
US military spending: 600 billion. US government healthcare expenditures: 1 trillion. US healthcare costs paid for by private citizens:
3 trillion. We are paying almost 7x as much for healthcare as we are for our military, which is itself ludicrously expensive.
Per head, this is how we compare to the rest of the world:
Or close enough, pretty much any source should say roughly the same thing
Notice that in exchange for this, Americans receive a much lower level of care. Our life expectancy has been increasing at about 50-80% the rate that it has been increasing in other developed nations, we have less facilities and less doctors, and those doctors we do have are inefficiently distributed with too many specialists. In spite of all the private money spent, many Americans can't or don't get medical help because of financial concerns.
The American system is also extremely biased against the poor; we have a disproportionate amount of our spending as private, meaning the financial burden is put equally on the poor and the rich. The US tax system directs sales taxes and social security, which are basically flat and the only taxes truly paid by the poor, towards healthcare and military expenses that do little for them personally. While meanwhile directing property taxes (the form of tax disproportionately paid by the rich) towards local schools that will benefit their own kids and no one else's. As a result, the poor pay through the nose for shit that is absolutely useless to them while the rich pay almost nothing into the healthcare pool yet get to be the only ones that directly benefit from their own personal tax payments. Medicaid and social security in particular still force private citizens to pay out of pocket, yet target groups of people who cannot increase their income to actually pay for expensive procedures. Retirees because they presumably don't work, and poor people because if they make more money they lose medicaid. And of course in a global economy, how do you increase your income? Education, the one thing all those taxes the poor pay doesn't actually get them. Thus any procedure that is sufficiently expensive is largely off limits to anyone who doesn't have a full time job. Which of course, the big reason no one has those any more is because anyone with a full time job in the US has to be provided medical benefits paid for by the employer, so that's another huge economic problem.
Basically? Our healthcare system fails to provide healthcare, and if we were to reform it right now to match the OECD average in both cost per person and care per person,
we wouldn't have a deficit. The debt would go down every year. Healthcare reform is the single most urgent issue facing the US bar none. If left unchecked, the economic and social damage that our healthcare system causes could singlehandedly end our status as a superpower.
Edit: OK that last statement may have been slightly hyperbolic. Healthcare deserves the majority of the blame for our economic downslide, and that could singlehandedly cause us our superpower status to quietly fizzle out. So I guess a more accurate statement would be "healthcare, education, military, and prisons could eventually end our status as a superpower, with healthcare taking over 50% of the blame."