Car insurance is good. I have certain risks in driving that are specific to me: my needs, my driving record, the car I drive. I pay for my level of risk.
1Health insurance is nothing like this. I have no choice in the level of coverage I want. I want catastrophic. No copays, no preventive, no maternity, no BC. Thus, I am not paying for insurance anymore in that I am not insuring risks that I actually have.
2I don't think that necessarily follows.
3Neither do I. But ACA is overkill. We could have met those needs countless other ways. Instead, we forced everyone into cookie-cutter "insurance" plans that don't actually solve the problem.
4Gotcha entertainment "news," is great comedy but not great at presenting the facts without bias. I shudder to think how many people form their opinions based on this kind of thing. Knoxville is not equivalent to a third-world country. You could start a free clinic any place in the US and people would go. This piece does not "prove" that America does not have the best system in the world. Neither does the US' placement on a list generated by WHO. For the record, I wouldn't place the US at the top of the list either, but we are certainly one of the best when it comes to quality of care and outcomes of people who interact with the healthcare system.
5We can do better in making sure more people can access the system.
This probably sums it up better than I can.
6If I had to get treated for cancer, heart disease, etc, I would choose the US system over any other in the world. I think we have the best educated doctors who benefit from most of the medical research being done here in the States. I want every citizen to have more access to our system. However, I don't want to accomplish that by adopting a system that would hurt the things we are very good at.