> The fact Republicans wouldn't repeal ACA but would repeal the tax credits just shows both sides prefer it to be broken.
It really doesn't. All it shows is that team R is following it's usual playbook of "The government is broken - elect me, and I'll make sure of it."
> Democrats could shove through enough votes to repeal ACA to make health insurance cheaper for lower-risk groups without tax credits
The only true part of that statement is that they could get enough votes to repeal it without replacement. But it wouldn't make anything cheaper.
The only way insurance would get cheaper is if it went back to not covering pre-existing conditions, which is contrary to the whole point of insurance.
It's wild that you're blaming the dems for... Not repealing without replacement, and pushing us straight into a completely broken shitshow?
> lower-risk groups
Oh, I understand now. You're are explicitly unhappy that the dems aren't agreeing to your plan to massively hike rates for anyone with a pre-exisiting condition, or literally any complication that would get them discriminated against prior to the ACA.
Sorry, that's a shitty thing for you to be fighting for, and they are in the right to not do it.
ACA without subsidies is a regressive tax due to the price differential cap from young to old. It's a wealth transfer from younger/poorer people to older/wealthier people still on private insurance. Health risks track most closely with being older and thus on average wealthier.
It's just the people that have tricked you, have used statistical correlation and cover of pre-existing condition to hide the fact what they're actually doing is robbing from the poorer to subsidize the richer.
It's a wealth transfer from healthy people to sick people. That's the whole point of health insurance.
Older people are sicker and older people are wealthier, but older sicker people on ACA plans are not wealthier than the median.
It's a sleight of hand to collate the two (old-rich and old-sick), but sure, if this is such a large concern, the solution is adding means testing, not just leaving sick people with care they can't afford.
Due to the way ACA works (disallows pre-existing condition discrimination) it's young-average[for age] vs old-overage[for age] with a cap on the ratio. Which functions as a regressive wealth transfer when the premium subsidies get gutted.
It really doesn't. All it shows is that team R is following it's usual playbook of "The government is broken - elect me, and I'll make sure of it."
> Democrats could shove through enough votes to repeal ACA to make health insurance cheaper for lower-risk groups without tax credits
The only true part of that statement is that they could get enough votes to repeal it without replacement. But it wouldn't make anything cheaper.
The only way insurance would get cheaper is if it went back to not covering pre-existing conditions, which is contrary to the whole point of insurance.
It's wild that you're blaming the dems for... Not repealing without replacement, and pushing us straight into a completely broken shitshow?
> lower-risk groups
Oh, I understand now. You're are explicitly unhappy that the dems aren't agreeing to your plan to massively hike rates for anyone with a pre-exisiting condition, or literally any complication that would get them discriminated against prior to the ACA.
Sorry, that's a shitty thing for you to be fighting for, and they are in the right to not do it.