Expressed this way I am in total agreement with you. And I think plenty of others would be too. The big schism here seems to be between a view that many or most people who can’t afford health care are undeserving of it because they are lazy free-riders on those that end up paying for it and the alternative view that many people remain unable to afford healthcare because of personal, social and economic factors beyond their control and best effort.
An example would be 12 year old girl with leukaemia whose parents are hourly waged hospitality workers with no benefits. It’s not clear how
@bmf666 would see her receiving medical treatment and whether she is deserving of it.
Another example would be someone in their early 20s who had done all that
@bmf666 thinks people should do. Worked hard in school, took on part-time jobs to build her skills, planned to apply to the military but had a psychotic episode one day and was found to have schizophrenia. Unfortunately she comes from a broken home with a drug addicted mum and a violent father so cannot look to her family for support. How should her care be funded? Does she deserve care?