So now it's 'nearly any'? You have just accepted limiting principles.
Only because I'm humble. I'm unable to identify any. Perhaps someone else can.
You're just hand waving now. The Constitution as written allows the Congress to levy taxes. The Constitution as written also allows the Congress to expend funds on public health, which health insurance inarguably is. There is simply no rational way to argue that the Constitution as written by the framers would prevent the government from taxing you and then buying you health care with it. If you believe that this power should not be in the hands of government you are opposing the Constitution as the framers wrote it. That's fine if you want to do that, as they were far from perfect men. You need to understand what you are arguing however.
Okay. The government can tax. It can use that tax to force people to buy
whatever it wants. By extension, they can force people
not to buy whatever it wants. By extension again, they can dictate to people what they can or cannot do with whatever they are forced to buy.
What constitutional limits apply to government at all using this argument? The government can force me to buy [broccoli | health insurance] with tax dollars. Why can't they dictate to me [how it shall be cooked | what doctors I may use]? What constitutional barrier exists to stop them from that?
My position wasn't extreme or not extreme, it was simply a statement of fact. There is effectively no difference between the government forcing you to spend $1,000 on health care yourself and the government taxing you $1,000 and spending it on health care for you. Recognition of this fact doesn't force you to do anything. It would be nice if you took it and reexamined your opinion, but instead you have decided to adopt an opinion that you appear to be implicitly stating you do not actually hold. That seems awfully silly.
I don't hold that position. It's the only hypothetical rebuttal I can think of to your position. I don't agree that the government has unlimited power over what we buy or don't buy, and by the tone of the SCOTUS hearings, neither do a few SC justices. But if I did, the only reasonable way to defeat that is by believing that all taxes are evil, since they feed the beast that takes freedoms.