Well, there's the rub, eh? Essentially, your world view boils down to something like "As long as the rich are OK (and as long as I'm rich), then screw everyone else. 'cause life isn't fair".
Well, you know what? I think it's the duty of human beings, as social creatures, to strive for fairness. To not let people die or suffer when to help them is of minimal inconvenience to the whole. To work together to smooth out the pockets of unfairness where they can reasonably be eliminated. To live with bold ethical convictions and a keen sense of the needs and desires of my fellow man. to be a decent human being who actually feels bothered when students, old people, immigrants and manual labourers are left even more destitute after life-saving surgery than they were before.
If you want to live in a world where it's dog eat dog, every man for himself and well, life's not fair so why bother with compassion, then fine. I don't, and nor do most mature, sensible, grown-up adults.
If I am rich I wish someone would tell me where all my money is.
Where did I say that we should all be looking out for only number one and forget everybody else? I said life is not fair and it isn't governments place to try and make it so. If we do, who gets to decide what is fair? Is it fair that supermodels are pretty and some people aren't? Should the government provide plastic surgery to make every one look attractive? Is it fair that my friends mother died due to malpractice, or that Darat's mother has had to have extensive medical procedures? Is it fair that I had to work and put myself through school, when my parents paid for my brother to go? What is fair? How do you decide? Why should the government be the one to decide who deserves compassion? I know plenty of people who give of themselves everyday to help others, and I applaud them. I even try to do some things myself when I can. Just because I realize that life isn't fair and that some people get the short end of the stick, doesn't mean I like it that way.