Posted by tecwrg on 7/23/2015 1:42:00 PM (view original):
I disagree.
As long as the current implementation is in place, there will be a prevailing "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED" attitude, and there will be little to no interest in making the MAJOR reforms that are needed to fix the system correctly. The ONLY way to stay focused on the problem is to roll back the monstrosity that's been shoved down our throats as say "Well that's not the answer, let's try something else". Provided that the something else is a top-down reform of the entire system, or at least heading in that direction.
Unlike you, I'm not going to accept complacency as an acceptable end.
Look realistically at the political landscape. If the ACA is ever repealed, would the replacement reforms be closer to what you want done than the ACA is now?
I don't think so.
The ACA is lowering health care costs:
www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2014-09-05/obamacare-effect-linked-to-lower-medical-cost-estimates
"Obamacare has been criticized by Republicans as costly and unsustainable. Now, four years after its arrival, the law’s mandated program cuts and the medical practices it encourages -- limiting unneeded procedures, and keeping people out of the hospital longer -- are cited by economists as key ingredients in trimming the nation’s medical bill. While the recession has had an influence on the cost slowdown, it doesn’t explain it all, according to policy analysts and the CBO."
No one is accepting complacency. I'm saying that it is easier to make incremental improvements instead of scrapping it and starting from scratch.