Where do you think his pharmacy gets the bulk of it's income from?
I don't know. I was waiting for your evidence (different from an assumption) that it was the government.
It's not OK for corporate CEOs to make a ton of money? How do you figure that, but at the same time have no problem with Tom Brady making $8mil?
I didn't know who Tom Brady was and had to Google him. He's not making his money at the expense of those needing health care.
Expertise and advice <> health care. We aren't sending doctors over there to care for patients for free. That's what charities are for.
The USAID funding includes amounts for treatment and care.
General welfare of the United States. Pursuit of happiness not happiness.
Promote the general welfare (from the Preamble to the Constitution) would seem to include food, shelter, health care. Not "pursuit of happiness," but, from the Declaration of Independence, "...such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness." And from Article One, Section 8, of the Constitution, "...provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States...." The United States includes its citizens; as I said before, I believe "general welfare" includes food, shelter, and health care.
So basic healthcare = liver transplants but not breast cancer drugs that extend life?
Well, in Arizona, apparently basic health care doesn't include liver or other transplants. On purely economic grounds, of course. Just as apparently, in the UK it does. As for breast cancer drugs that "extend life," that is a question that in the US the "health care provider" (aka, insurance company) would have to decide. Since they are mostly for-profit entities, it's anyone's guess whether or not they would approve the drug. Even if approved, there would probably be at least a 20% copay, which many people (including your straw-woman from the UK) wouldn't be able to afford. Or if the person had no insurance, the full cost not only of the medicine, but of the preceding doctor's visits (including oncologist), chemotherapy, and radiation treatment. So what happens if they have no insurance and cannot afford these bills? Under your stated philosophy, it's tough luck, you should have saved, drop dead. I'd rather have the philosophy of the UK and other civilized countries.
Oh, sorry. It's successfully feeding and housing 99.8% of all American citizens. Pretty damn good.
With a U.S. 2010 population of 308,745,538, I get 15.9% in danger of hunger; 5.6% actually experiencing hunger; 0.2% homeless (based on single-night numbers); and 0.5% homeless (numbers over a year). Pretty damn bad when 49.1 million people are in danger of suffering from hunger and 17.5 million actually do suffer from hunger. Pretty damn bad when 1.56 million people over the course of a year are homeless and 643,067 people are homeless on a single night.