I wager that Vikarion's belief system and those who follow it will die out as this generation continues, anyway.
One can only hope. His attitude - and the number of people who share it, in all its infuriatingly unhealthy (hurr) levels of backwardness and blind stupidity - is sickening, and one of the reasons I fucking hate the situation in this country, and the people who put it that way.
I had a longer rant about how stupid and ignorant that attitude is, but frankly, not worth it.
Those who are capable of operating on a cold analysis of cost/benefit will always have an advantage over those who do not.
That said, as I've mentioned before, I don't think that a completely private system is the most efficient administration of health care in this country. I also don't think that the United States will be best served by a completely public system.
My biggest concern is that it be an efficient and innovative system. The system in the United States is fairly innovative, possibly the most innovative, but it sure as hell is not efficient. That is to say, it is not providing good care for the majority of the citizenry.
But to simply assert that the United States would magically become awesome at health by adopting a NHS is to fail to realize that some of the worst problems are a result of diet and activity. Americans eat way too much bad food, quite honestly. It's not just what sort, but how much. And they engage in quite a lot of other bad activities. A health care system that does not dis-incentivize and punish bad behavior is going to result in major problems, as undue resources are devoted to those who pursue risky and dangerous behaviors.
Nor is it wise, financially, to devote extensive amounts of resources to those who will never have the potential to repay them. This may be unpalatable, but efficiency really does rule over all. If resources are not directed efficiently, there will be no system to treat anyone with.
To wit, and the question I was trying to pose, what do you do with the curable, but otherwise terminal, patient who will cost a million to fix? What about ten million, etc? This isn't a concrete question, it's a hypothetical, and it's essentially asking how much you think preserving a life is worth, in resources. If you say, all of them, then you rob all the other people who need help. Otherwise, you are going to have to decide where you cut people off, or refuse to treat even otherwise save-able people. Right now, that occurs in the U.S. privately - you don't have enough money, you die. This seems horrible, apparently, to people who aren't me. Fine. But no matter what, there are going to be people who you could save, but can't afford to. How are you going to select those people?