Apparently to help prevent injury/damage to another person/propery, and if such does happen, to have a means for the other to be able to cover it, if its their fault
Driving a motor vehicle is a personal choice. Obtaining medical care is a personal choice. I would think that requiring insurance in both cases is to make sure people are compensated for services rendered.
The chasm of difference here is again, the
compensation of services rendered in an auto accident are to pay for the damage/injury to SOMEONE ELSE. No one is saying you don't pay for your OWN healthcare services. If you have "services rendered" for YOURSELF, you absolutely should pay for it. But its your choice, if you want said services. A car accident wasn't a "personal choice". The mandate for car insurance is liability, to cover someone else, not yourself, in the event of a non personally chosen accident
So that is why we are talking about it. It is simply a thought exercise.
I deduce its merely arguing, for the sake of arguing, since there's still no substantive comparison between the reasons for mandating auto insurance, vs that of mandating healthcare insurance.
It's strange to consider that way back when, companies that offered healthcare insurance were considered beacons of progress, as it was an incentive to want to go work for them, vs a company that didn't offer it. Sad how this country has so waffled to political correctness