I don’t really think this addresses what I said at all. You have indicated repeatedly that people should get good health insurance by getting better jobs or skills. But it isn’t that simple.
For one thing I think your idea that the less well remunerated jobs could be passed off or removed is questionable, especially given some other comments I have seen you make.
As well, business, and as a result government do not want to change the way things are done now. They want cheap labour, jobs that have poor remuneration and benefits, and a working underclass. It is good for business.
Imagine, for example, that every illegal worker in the US was somehow sent home. Well, in some cases there would have to be higher wages and benifits to attract people to necessary jobs (meaning less profit for the business owner.) Some businesses might not be able to make a go of it. Other positions people might do without - most don’t have to have a cleaning lady. Or some really required jobs might go unfilled, which would also put a stall on production.
But production would go down no matter what (and some people would really miss their maids

).
THe thing about business is that it is amoral - it really has no way integral to it’s process to concider morality - it depends on the people who run it, or use it, to provide morality. But in big business, especially when it is publicly owned, that becomes much more difficult. The responsibility of a company to it’s shareholders is to bring profit - not being a person, it has no responsibility to God. That being the case, how can one expect business to really do the right thing about caring for its workers?
The primary responsibility of government,OTOH, is to it’s citizens. That includes business, but is not meant to be primarily towards business. So caring for the health of citizens is a much more natural responsibility of government than of business. I don’t see any reason it couldn’t be delegated, but it would still have to provide accountability.
One interesting thing I have noticed in this and other discussions is the deep distrust, and I’d even say moral loathing that many Americans seem to have for their government. It seems to me this is a major obstacle in allowing government any real responsibility. I have seen some interesting analysis of why this is so - some reasons seem historical, but OTOH distrust of government has grown hugely in the US since the 1950s. This correlates with some other stats, which may or may not be related - the rise of television; a sharp reduction of people involved in civic activity and other organizations outside of the home.
But this is markedly different, I think, than other Western countries. Although there is recognition of corruption and people joke about the type of people who enter politics, there is actually a general feeling that the government tries to serve the people, and if it doesn’t, we can at least monitor what they are doing through the processes that are built in. (The same cannot be said of big business.)
I guess I wonder - why do many Americans think there government is so incompetent and immoral that they cannot trust their welfare to them in the least? Not in “what evidence is there of this” but as in “what has caused this, especially since the government is made up of citizens?”