Just to clarify, this is why health care is not a right. Strap in kids, this is going to be a long one.
First, let's look at the definition of a right, in this case used as a noun in the legal sense of the word:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/right
"1: qualities (such as adherence to duty or obedience to lawful authority) that together constitute the ideal of moral propriety or merit moral approval
2: something to which one has a just claim: such as
a: the power or privilege to which one is justly entitled
"voting rights"
"his right to decide"
b(1): the interest that one has in a piece of property—often used in plural
"mineral rights"
(2)rights plural : the property interest possessed under law or custom and agreement in an intangible thing especially of a literary and artistic nature
"film rights of the novel"
3: something that one may properly claim as due
"knowing the truth is her right""
So, basically a right is something you are due. An inalienable right is something no one can take away, including the government, other people, even God. The very definition of inalienable is that nothing can take it from you and you can not give it away. An inalienable right is also what we are dealing with, as these are rights that people are arguably born with and these are the rights listed in the bill of rights.
Before getting to the constitution, let's take a brief layover in the Declaration of Independence. In this document, the one that got this whole thing started, Jefferson wrote that people have 3 basic inalienable rights: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. So, as people we automatically have the right not to be deprived of life (i.e. not murdered). We have the right to do what we want, with the understanding that we can not do something that tries to deny others their inalienable rights. We have the right to the pursuit of happiness. Note that word "pursuit". We do not have the right to happiness, but we have the right to try and obtain happiness and, again, do what we want. These 3 things are what the the Bill of Rights would later be based on.
It should be noted, that the Bill of Rights is NOT a list of rights that the government gives to the people, it is a list of inalienable rights that the people already have and the government can not make laws against. It does not mean that people do not have more rights than those listed, but they certainly do not have less.
Let's look at some of the right listed in the bill of right and how they relate to the three inalienable rights.
Number 1! The right to free speech. This hearkens back to the right to liberty and the pursuit of happiness. We all have the right to speak as we please and do what we want. My speech can not, however, cause others to lose their life: i.e. I can not make a call to action that calls for the death of someone else. I can not make speech that actively calls for the taking away of someone's freedom, as in kidnapping them.
Number 2! The right to bear arms. This is easy. It has to do with ones right to life and the preservation of it. I have the right to own a gun and protect myself, not only against others who would take my life, but against those that would try to take my rights a well.
Number 5! Right to due process of law, freedom from self incrimination, and double jeopardy! Again, right to pursuit of happiness and liberty. You have to right not to live in fear that the government will try you for the same crime over and over until they convict. You also have the right to not act against your own interest by incriminating yourself.
Number 9! People have other rights not listed! This is a big one, as it does state that the Bill of Rights is not the end all be all. It is simply a 10 ten list.
Number 10! Powers reserved for the states! This was less of a right, and more so a guide that says the states have the right to self govern anything not specifically given to the federal government. Many people seem to forget that we are a government made up of 50 smaller governments. For those that have worked retail, the federal government is like the store manager. The states are like the department managers. The store manager sets their own rules and standards that go for all departments, but the department managers have the autonomy to run their areas as they see fit and can exceed the basic standards, but can not be short of them or make rules that contradict the store manager. If you do not like one department, you can transfer to another, but the basics will be the same. This all comes down to a right to pursuit of happiness. Not happy in New York. Try Alaska!
So, we see that rights almost always go back to at least one of the 3 inalienable rights. So... why is health care not a right?
Well, look at the rights listed. All of them state you are due the ability to do something or not be forced to do something. None of them guarantee you getting something though. A right to speech does not guarantee you the right to post articles in someone's news paper. You can start your own news paper, but an existing one can not be forced to publish your stuff if they do not want to. You have a right to speech, but not a right to someone else's stuff. I.E., you can not infringe on someone else's rights to enact your own.
Health Care is generated by the work and effort of others. You have the right to life, but not the right to the fruits of someone else's labor. Companies have invested time and money into developing new technologies and medicine. They did so with the understanding that they could make money back from their efforts. We the people, do not have the right to their efforts. We do have the right to choose what steps we take in our own health care though. We have the right to go to whatever doctor we want, as long as we agree to their terms (ie.e pay them). We have the right to take any medicine we want, or not take it. We do not have the right to steal it or forced them to give it to us.
This is why I have an issue with AOC. She seems to think people have the right to basic income without working, basic housing without payment, and basic health care without payment. No... those things are not rights. No one is due these things just by being born. If she just said she wanted to provide these things because she felt the government had a duty to do so I would at least respect her opinion, though still disagree with it. But no, she says these are rights. People have a right to the labor of others. So, that mean at some point the argument can be made that others have the right to my labor or work when they don't.
Sorry I couldn't condense this into a meme....let's try this