It is unfortunate that you think a bill to lower US health care costs and extend services to those who do not have health care is forcing something down your throat. The US system is incredibly expensive, inequitable, and inefficient. The Obama health care bill was a first step in bringing the US into line with what people in other modern nations take for granted. Even simply copying the flawed Canadian health care system would have been an improvement. Sadly, corporate interests and the reactionary right wing media have created a sense of hysteria over what should have been a simple restructuring of a seriously flawed system.
Good luck enjoying paying your continually increasing health care premiums.
Hey Bar, I don't think it's quite as simple as that. First of all, there are problems in the U.S. health care system and I don't think anyone would disagree with that. Virtually any system anywhere has problems. I think it is an expensive system, somewhat inequitable, but inefficient? Hmm...not by my personal experience, and I've had some. Danny Williams might also see it that way right about now.
I think the Obama bill was NOT just a first step...and that's what killed it. It was a complete about-face from what exists, and that's a whole bunch of steps. Which may have led to the feelilng of having it "rammed down their throats." If you're gong to eat an elephant, it's best to do it one bite at a time.
Copying the flawed Canadian system would not have been an improvement, in my opinion. First of all, we have tons of problems in our own system (many of which were covered in a previous/different thread), but more importantly, trying to overlay a system like that in a culture like the U.S. would be a very poor fit. Why replace one problem with another - possibly bigger - one? To me, that would be taking at least one step backward.
I think Obama's idealism got the better of him on this one, and it could prove to be his ultimate downfall. In spite of his promise to bring great and wonderful changes to the U.S., I think his skills to do so are lacking. It ain't an easy job to dig into something as all-encompassing as health care (affects everyone) because if it was, anyone could do it.
President Obama has made the possibly fatal error of simply trying to impose his views and values on to the American public, and some of them (could be many) don't like it a bit. We're seeing the beginnings of that opposition now and not just from the politicians in Washington...from the real people out there. Massachusetts was a strong indication that he's on the wrong track, and I think he's painfully aware of it. The question is, can he get it back on track, at least for realistic debate? Not sure...