If there is a right to health care (some think there is), then they forfeited their right and by doing so and then taking up a bed, they violated the rights of the innocent. — James Riley
Well I don't think there is a right to health care.
If I go to a bookstore and buy the last copy of a book you want such that you can't now buy it, I have not violated your rights. Your issue is with the bookstore owner, not me.
If I get sick and go into a hospital and am given a bed such that you now can't get one, I have not violated your rights. Your issue is with the hospital's practices, not me.
Now, you have asked if I will ever change my position - I assume you have asked that becasue you now think I'm a dogmatist. Why do you think taht given that I am arguing every step of the way? That's the mark of a non-dogmatist.
Locke argued - and I think he's broadly correct (it is a bloody good guiding principle anyway) - that the state is not entitled to do to us what we would not be entitled to do to each other in the state's absence. That, like I say, seems broadly correct, and seems correct for good reason: we do not get our rights from the state, rather the state's justification rests on its ability to protect our rights. And thus the rights the state is justified in protecting are not ones that it - the state - creates, but ones we had anyway. And thus, the state is not entitled to do to us what we would not be entitled to do to each other in its absence.
That's not a dogmatic view, but a highly rational one. And there will be grey areas - grey areas precisely becuase it is sometimes not clear what we would be entitled to do to each other in the state's absence.
But if you want to take risks with your life - if you want to engage in dangerous sports and so on - then that's not something I'm entitled to stop you doing. Not until or unless it violates my rights.
And if someone sets up a hospital and undertakes to treat you if you injure yourself, that too is something they're entitled to do. I mean, that's nice and doesn't violate your rights.
But that person - the person who sets up the hospital - is not then entitled to stop you engaging in dangerous sports because they don't want to treat you, or want to free up bed space to treat others. Yes?
So the state is not allowed to do those things either.