I do believe that you would favor caring for society’s needy,
@Bomb#20.
I just don’t know how you envision such care being administered, because you seem to find fault with every institution or mechanism that purports to try to do that.
Perhaps clarifying your vision of how caring for society’s needy could/should happen, would silence some of your critics.
My vision doesn't really involve me telling others how to do it -- I'm an electrical engineer, not a health care economist. In my ideal fantasy, American politicians would admit to the public that they aren't health care economists either and aren't competent to design a better health care system, so they're outsourcing it to somebody who's good at it. They'd collect quality-of-results statistics from all the single-payer and mixed public/private systems in other countries, identify who has the top-rated system, and hire that country's experts to rebuild the American system in its image. Based on the WHO's numbers, that means we'd bring in the French.
(But that said, I know my country, so I'm confident that if we actually tried to hire French experts to tell us how to duplicate French health care in America we'd find some way to screw it up. And in any event, the chances of us following their instructions correctly, while low, are quite a bit higher than the chances of our politicians admitting they aren't competent to design a better health care system.)