This isn't an expanded "analysis" of what you previously stated, or an answer to my question. Just superfluous bullshit.
Since your answer was incredibly anemic and insubstantial, let me answer my own question:
JON GRUBER, economist, Massachusetts Institute of Technology: It's worked very well. I think the facts are very clear. We have lowered the number of uninsured by 60 percent, from about 10 percent of the population to about 4 percent of the population. We have done so on budget. We essentially are exactly where we thought we would be when we started the program in 2006.
And we have done so in a way which is very popular with the public. It's got about a 74 percent public approval rating.
They are being "forced", yet they voted for the program and it is overwhelmingly popular. 
Thanks for the laughs, "Gigantor!"
Ok. It points out that more people are insured and people like it because they get health care. I'm not arguing that at all.
From the same "article/blog" that you found your information at:
--
BETTY ANN BOWSER (Newshour): The Massachusetts law has also not solved another major problem,
the shortage of primary care physicians, which got worse when more people had insurance and could afford to go to a doctor.Every year since passage in 2006, the Massachusetts Medical Society has found the shortage to be either critical or severe. And that's affected traffic to the emergency room.--
or
--
BETTY ANN BOWSER: Unlike some other parts of the country, health care reform here in Massachusetts is popular. And one of the reasons is because
just about everybody who lives here has health insurance. So, while the law that passed a few years ago has been successful in getting more people into the tent,
it also has created some new issues.
Perhaps the biggest one is,
the law has done nothing to rein in the price tag for taking care of people. Economist Gruber says
cost containment was never a goal of the Massachusetts legislation. Its focus was to get more people insured.--
or (From Reason Magazine)
http://reason.com/archives/2010/04/07/health-cares-history-of-fiscal
And then there is the Massachusetts plan, the model for ObamaCare. The state's health care program has successfully expanded coverage to about 97 percent of the state's population,
but the price tag may be more than the state can bear.When the program was signed into law,
estimates indicated that the cost of its health insurance subsidies would be about $725 million per year. But by 2008,
those projections had been revised. New estimates indicated that the plan was to cost $869 million in 2009 and $880 million in 2010, an upwards increase of nearly 20 percent. More recently, the governor's office announced a
$294 million shortfall on health care funds, and state health insurance commissioners have warned that, on its current course, the program may be headed for bankruptcy. According to an analysis by the Rand Corporation,
"in the absence of policy change, health care spending in Massachusetts is projected to nearly double to $123 billion in 2020, increasing 8 percent faster than the state’s gross domestic product (GDP)." The state's treasurer,
a former Democrat who recently split with his party, says that the program has survived only because of federal assistance.So there you go. Wonderful, the new law got more people insured and than it pretty much stopped there. This goes back to my original "in depth" analysis that you foolishly disregarded. The law has done nothing to stem rising costs (they are rising) or make sure there are not shortages of health care in general (the shortages are severe to critical).