<<No, your revisionist rationalizations aside, they actually founded this country on Life, LIBERTY and the PURSUIT of Happiness, (which interestingly does not equate to a right to happiness.) >>
We both know what's in the Constitution, sirs. And we both know that the Constitution allows a framework for citizens to elect representative who will pass legislation on various subjects with various objects. Unless you are totally insane, I don't think you will argue that it would be unconstitutional for the elected representatives of the people to enact a national health scheme like Social Security or Medicare, only broader in scope, taking in citizens of all ages.
So the real issue does NOT involve the Constitution or its framers, but really what the citizens want their representatives to do for them within the framework already established by the Constitution.
<<It's been subsequent congresses & Presidents mutating the founders' intent and constitutional boundries that were intended to inhibit, NOT facilitate government intervention on the populace>>
Well, I'm sure that from time to time, unconstitutional legislation has in fact been passed, and when it did, the courts dealt with it appropriately. Your statement is broad and general and really has nothing to do with this one issue, unless of course you mean to say that a universal health care scheme enacted by Congress would somehow be unconstitutional, which I don't think even you would be crazy enough to argue.