A great many positives remain intact (although often tattered) in the United States.
Freedom, property rights, respect for (honest) law, Christian / human values of compassion and respect for the rights of others are still in evidence here -- more so than most places in the world -- and the follow-on effects include material benefits we often take for granted in this country. This article includes a nice list of such benefits.
The link below is one many here may choose to pass by, as Buzzfeed is a heavily leftist (maliciously so, imo) site in many of their posts (here's a page of their stories on "Trump"). I certainly understand if you'd rather avoid the site, or even if you're angry at my posting this here. To each his own.
But obnoxious anti-MAGA viewpoints are not the only thing they post, and I'm happy to visit them when they have something positive to offer, like the article below. I was surprised at some of the perceived benefits of my home country that Europeans wished were common in their own part of the world.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/ajanibazile/europeans-jealous-of-american
1 - "If you have insurance: healthcare. Yeah, you see all the absurdities of the US healthcare system, however everything is much faster. You can get a specialist in a few days or a non-emergency surgery in a week. In Europe, it may take months." —u/Phadafi
2 - "Garages are pretty uncommon here, and it definitely seems like a luxury to have a house for your two or three cars attached to your house for your people." —u/YouCanLookItUp
3 - "College availability. The US has outstanding community colleges and easy transfer to world-class universities. In EU, such universities are unavailable without family or prep school credentials in advance." —u/PigletAltruistic9339
4 - "Insulation and heating. Eastern Europe and Scandinavia were different, but in the UK and much of continental Europe, 'heavy curtains' are viewed as suitable insulation in the winter and the heat goes on for an hour and a half a day. Brrrr."
5 - "Wild legal car customization. Here in Switzerland, you'd have to pay about 10K in order to install a turbocharger on a small car and It can only add 10% of power (legally)." —u/Kronocide
6 - "For some people, the size of your homes in places like Utah and Texas. There's a dedicated room for everything. Kids playroom that isn't the living room or the kid's bedroom, walk-in pantry room, a laundry room, and more." —u/mcnunu
7 - "More disability access. I can go to any place — theatre, store, office, school, whatever — with confidence that I'll be able to navigate fine in my wheelchair, and they'll have ramps and/or elevators." —u/5AgainstRhodeIsland
8 - "Free use of public bathrooms. Using them in Europe usually costs .50 cents to a full Euro." —u/New_Midnight6134
9 - "Europeans cannot comprehend how much better American vented clothes dryers are. There is a reason nobody in the US line dries their clothes. American dryers dry everything perfectly at low temperatures, unlike ventless dryers which just kinda heat the clothes up. The dryer in the average American home is better than the ones in European laundromats." —u/notyourproblem1
10 - "You can pretty much choose to live in any climate you like when you live in the USA and still be in the same country. You like four seasons? Move to the Northeast. You like humid ocean climate? Move to Seattle. You like dry warm weather? Move to Los Angeles. You like deserts? Move to Arizona. You like warm and humid weather? move to the Southeast. As a German who loves warm weather, I am always jealous because of those options. If I wanted to try to move somewhere warm I would have to move to a new country and learn Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, French, Greek, or other southern European languages." —u/DachauPrince
11 - "24 hour pharmacies." —u/HoyAIAG
12 - "Air conditioning. Americans pump it all summer long." —u/Meeeeehhhh
13 - "Free refills at restaurants."
14 - "Extensive national parks." —u/livingfeelsachore
15 - "Backyards. I'd plant so many vegetables." —Lanky-Truck6409
16 - "Being a consumer in the US is incredibly convenient. There's same-day or next-day free delivery on almost any item on Amazon. Most stores and restaurants are open seven days a week and you're able to return almost anything you buy for a full refund, no questions asked." —u/asuth
17 - "Apartment complex pools and the regular washing of the windows of high-rise buildings (it’s infrequent in Europe)." —petrastales
18 - "Huge schools with labs and gyms and theaters." —PckMan
19 - "Big kitchens and big refrigerators and freezers. Even in my student apartment, we had a pretty good-sized kitchen. I was dating a Czech girl and her parents came to visit. When they went to my apartment for dinner, the mom was just amazed at the size of my fridge. They were amused when I dumped the scraps in the sink and turned on the garbage disposal. They’d heard about it but had never seen one." —u/Granadafan
20 - "I’m surprised no one has mentioned a nice shower. Not everywhere in Europe is the same but far too often showering is a chore instead of a relaxing experience." —u/Workywork15
21 - "Real Mexican food. We have Mexican restaurants in my home country but the owners are usually not Mexican and it’s just not the same. Now, I’m living in Japan and it’s the same problem. Mexican food is so delicious." —u/punpun_Osa
22 - "It used to be 24-hour stores and restaurants. That went away with covid." —u/MikeDunleavySuperFan
23 - And lastly, "Fresh air. It’s illegal in America to smoke in restaurants for example." —u/stacity
I have never seen #1 work like that.
Both specialist referrals and non-emergency surgeries can take months.
Heck! Even a new patient appointment for primary care can take months!!
It has definitely gotten worse over the last decade or so. The Fall in this are began with LBJ's Great Society and Medicare. Using Big Government to run so much of the medical industry has had the same effect that using Big Government to run Welfare, Education, and everything else it touches has had: turned it to shit.
EDIT: But overall, things are still better here than in England and most of Europe, from what I hear (I have relatives in the EU).
Yeah it definitely became much harder to get medical services when the Affordable Care Act went into effect. Premiums sky rocketed and wait times became insane.