No, you're arguing in bad faith. It's obvious that that wasn't what the OP meant. Besides, the insulin graft is an excellent example of how in some countries people with a particular illness are just seen as dairy cows to be milked for every last cent: because life is priceless.
In a just world - not the one we live in - medicine would be produced like every other bulk molecule, because that's really what it is. Insulin could cost ~ what you pay for some other complex chemical. But because of patents and various graft protecting industry practices depending on where you live you may be overpaying by many orders of magnitude for something that could be quite cheap.
Society is not my personal piggybank for help. Being born with a health condition already makes it an unjust world. Being entitled to other people's work by your own metric of payment is also unjust.
In a just world - not the one we live in - medicine would be produced like every other bulk molecule, because that's really what it is. Insulin could cost ~ what you pay for some other complex chemical. But because of patents and various graft protecting industry practices depending on where you live you may be overpaying by many orders of magnitude for something that could be quite cheap.