Wow, that really was great. And it points out the real aspect of the debate that isn't being discussed by the media. No, instead they're covering Tea Parties!
Let's not kid ourselves here, the health care business has a huge lobby and a lot of money that buys influence in the media and in government. Republicans are very much aligned against the President, but aren't offering any alternatives either.
The question is whether Americans can think for themselves or be influenced by Insurance companies and health care providers, or by their own legitimate need for quality care.
I don't believe health care is a right. The people who work in that business deserve compensation for the work they do, whether they are drug companies, doctors, hospital admins or pharmacists. They don't work for free and neither should they.
On the other hand, the medical profession deliberately limits the amount of doctors so they don't have to compete with each other for your business. The amount they charge for their services is outside the range of affordability for the average American out of their own pocket. Insurance companies are a major racket, renegotiation fees with the Doctors to pay them less than they want, and they make excessive profits, considering what they contribute in the way of services.
I lived in the UK, while I was a teen, and people who relied on the public doctors did not recieve the kind of quality care that Americans are/were used to. That doesn't mean Nationalized health can't work, but it isn't a magic answer.
As it is, the entire health care system, is geared towards helping you when your sick. It was set up this way, because that is what is profitable for providers, but it is not cost-effective. A national healthy system predicated on prevention would be much less costly and improve the quality of live for all Americans, but it will also require cooperation.
Why should you pay for a crack whore's healthcare, or an alchohlics or someone who smokes? There is nothing that justifies your subsidizing someone else's poor lifestyle choices. yet under a national system that would happen unless these people were somehow segmented. Note that most of these don't have any money anyway, and cannot afford care on their own. Should they be denied care, or should they be required to pay more since they are likely to make more use of the services than those who try to live responsibly.
I think I've demonstrated why this is not an easy decision. Even someone with the best of intentions has to think long and hard about how to impliment change over the current system if we are to derive benefit from it.