And since healthcare is a right, please cite the portion of the Constitution or quote any of the Founders to back such a claim.
Sorry, edit it.
Lets see here off the top of my head. "Act for the releif of sick and disabled seamen" passed both houses in 1798, and sign by john adams, then president. It was originally brought up at a meeting with Alexander Hamilton. It was Thomas Jefferson that vastly improved the bill and it was Albert Gallatin, the treasury secretary that enforced it.
Adams and Jefferson never liked each other, and disagreed on everything. But on taxing sailor and using the money to enforce healthcare, they where totally in agreement.
James Madison, 4th president and father of the consitution, said at a meeting, "If men where angels, no government would be necessary." Alexander Hamilton replied that " men are not angel and the government was needed to restrain the passion of men." Thomas Hobbs agreed, he was the guy that came up with the "unalienable rights", stating that if the government did not enforce the concepts of the first principle, it would be, as he put it, "vigilantism", or the "war of everyone against everyone."
The first principle was created to insure our liberty and freedom, created by Hobbs, simply states this;
The rule of law is a First Principle that mandates that the law governs everyone
The First Principle of unalienable rights recognizes that everyone is naturally endowed by their Creator with certain rights
Equality is a First Principle that recognizes that all persons are created equal
The First Principle of the Social Compact recognizes that governments are instituted by the people and derive their just powers from the consent of the governed
The First Principle of limited government means that the protection of unalienable rights is the legitimate purpose and limit of government requires the government to be strong enough to fulfill its purpose yet limited to that purpose.
The unalienable rights simply stated, "all men are endowed, by their Creator, with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.