Hi gyzzzmo,
I don't believe my argument is nonsense at all. (I should also add that just because you happen to disagree with another person's viewpoint in no way makes it "nonsense".) I agree with you only to the extent that the appearance of U.S. and the UK systems is different, but only momentarily. Obama calls it the "first step" only. It's no secret that his aim is fully nationalized healthcare, and he greatly admires the Western European healthcare programs. (I have seen a couple of British MPs on TV warning us to avoid a national healthcare system at all costs.) So how will it be nationalized here? Obama's agenda is not out in the open, but very likely the regulatory apparatus that results from the bill will have control over the pricing of individual policies and well as future price increases. It will then be quite easy to simply ensure that the insurers (now in reality just utilities under the act), through controlled pricing, cannot possibly be profitable. Those companies with then withdraw from the individual policy segment of the market, concentrating instead on commercial group plans. Once they're swept away, there will be a void, and to fill it, Obama will have Congress introduce "the public option". Then it's only a matter of a short time before corporations cancel their employee healthcare plans, and everyone's only choice is to jump into the public option. Hello nationalized healthcare!

Then there is Part 2 to seal the deal. Currently Medicare is split into two segments, traditional administered by governmental Medicare, and Advantage Plans offered by private insurers with some subsidy from Medicare. The purpose of stealing Medicare funds--$500 billion worth--to fund healthcare reform (i.e., adding 32 million people to the rolls), is that all of it will come out of the Advantage Plans, thereby eliminating them. All that will be left are the good 'ol traditional plan which is totally government controlled already.
Of course, before these two events unfold, the advent of the public option and the death of Medicare Advantage Plans, two other events might make them moot:
1) 14 States' Attorney Generals, immediately after Obama signed the reform today, filed suit in a federal district court courts challenging the Constitutionality under the "commerce clause" of forcibly mandating uninsured individuals to purchase healthcare policies for their own bodies or face a $750 fine. A 15th suit was filed separately by the AG in Virginia. (Virginia has also passed a state constitutional amendment protecting its citizens from having to comply with any compulsory purchase of health insurance. 37 other states also have state constitutional amendments in the works.) Never in the history of the U.S., has the federal government ever forced individuals to purchase any good or service. For example, even during WWII, no citizen was required to buy U.S. War Bonds. Yet it's a necessity for the government because without those folks enrolled, the system cannot be financially sustainable. In addition to the 14 State AGs I mention, as of today there are 23 more states in the wings ready to file similar lawsuits. From there the matter will probably be fast-tracked to the U.S. Supreme Court which, if convinced, could conceivably invalidate the act and strike it down in its entirety.
2) The congressional by-elections are just seven months away. If the Republicans were to gain majorities on both the House and Senate, then they would likely repeal the act and start over to redo healthcare reform incrementally at a pace that would not bankrupt the country. (85% of Americans were satisfied with their existing insurance and were not eager for any overhaul whatsoever, but were ignored by those who voted to pass the bill.) The GOP is passionate about tort reform to end outrageous malpractice suits and awards and that generates unnecessary defensive testing of patients, to prevent insurers from dropping sick people off their roles, to prevent people with preexisting conditions to be turned away, to prevent unjustified pushback on claims, to allow all insurers to competitively market their products across state lines, etc.
Adding 32 million people to healthcare at taxpayer expense is NOT "a marginal cost" by any stretch of the imagination. Over 10 years it will cost well over $2.5 trillion dollars. There is very little doubt that this will bankrupt the country (which cannot afford the existing entitlement programs), which will touch every American in catastrophic and tragic ways once national austerity kicks in.
Historically Americans don't like the notion of being enslaved by a nanny state, do not relish the mediocrity of collectivism, and abhor the confiscatory high taxes to support such a monstrosity. As the 18th century great American patriot Thomas Paine said, "The government that governs least governs best." Most people want to achieve the American Dream not through control and handouts, but instead through their own hard work and merit. That's what has made this nation great.
People also want to enjoy the fruits of their labors. It allows them to improve their lives. Americans have always admired the great philosopher, Ralph Waldo Emerson, who emphasized self-reliance and individualism. We don't need socialism or marxism or nannyism here. And along with that, Americans have given more charity at home and abroad than any other country in history. Look at the Marshall Plan to help rebuild Europe after WWII. Look at the recent huge amount of U.S. aid to Haiti after the earthquake there. Likewise, reasonable taxes allow businesses to invest, expand, spend on R & D, and introduce new product lines, facilities and jobs which boost the economy which benefits everyone. On the other side of the coin, no, we don't need or want higher taxes here to feed a bloated, overreaching, and terribly inefficient federal bureaucracy.