I’m unclear the purpose of your comment. I never said insurance wasn’t expensive. Taking someone who has no choice but to base their life around not bearing that cost because they must rely on employers to bear it for them, then suddenly acting like it’s a benefit that they can optionally take on that cost their life has been fundamentally structured to not bear, is not a solution to anything.
Presumably the existence of COBRA is meant to assist people experiencing a hard time with health coverage. It does not achieve that purpose. If insurance itself is prohibitively expensive that mediating it through COBRA means people are unhelped by COBRA, then replace COBRA with something that pays the cost of the coverage. Take your pick of many options, but shifting the cost burden onto someone who was told to structurally depend on it being tied to employers is not a thing. It’s a non-thing that does not count as an assistance or benefit.
It’s like if you lost your job and suddenly now breathing oxygen costs an extra fee, but it’s OK because you can just pay the oxygen fee you were forced into letting your employer pay on your behalf.