From the earliest beginning of our country, even later during the early years of our Revolutionary War, there can be found not rarely, not uncommonly, manifestations of a universal caring of health care among the populace. It is as if it were just a natural thing for most to do, a natural right. One can feel this even from the reading," This hospital environment was usually set up in a local home or community near the army's encampment. (Local citizenry could also have taken in a soldier or two, simply aiding a fellow human being and without being designated as a "hospital" location.)" This is written at the Thompson-Neely House, Washington Crossing Historic Park, Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. The first 10 amendments to the United States Constitution, "The Bill of Rights", were ratified on December 15, 1791. The Ninth Amendment, the Rule of construction of the Constitution states: The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people
7 AM the Day before Christmas voting for health care, Senator Robert C. Byrd, aged 92 voted, Aye. He has admonished, you and you, waving his little black book, deck card sized publication of the U.S. Constitution, which he carries near his heart, directing all citizens, read it. Dr Gerald J. Brown MD writes.
Among Constitutional framers there was James Madison very fearful of stating the first eight amendments that would lend a basis for assertions that there were no other basic rights of Americans. So he insisted on the Ninth Amendment. Micturation is not another natural right we are saying here and even others we might. We are pointing the finger at the universal right of health care that waits yet to be so proclaimed, a Constitutional right.