No..............................
Im English and have loooong term experience of a federalised health system- so let me clue some of you in on this...
There is no guarantee that this will improve matters for everyone - in fact so far as I can see it wont due to its own structure - but it WILL improve matters for some - namely those who dont have/cant afford private healthcare but are not so poor as they qualify for medicare/medicaid etc...
Will it be worth it - a resounding YES if its properly funded and that is the most important thing -
It has to be properly funded. If its not it could turn out badly.
The NHS in the UK is patchy at best - for two of the conditions I have that are rare, doctors dont have a clue, but then they wouldnt have either if I had private cover. Different areas allow different things to be funded which has sometimes led to court proceedings to get things changed (Heparin is one example)
IF the NHS had been funded properly from the start and all the way through then it would be alot better than it is today - as it is it is still one of the better systems in the world (unless you happen to have certain conditions, at which point they would rather you jump under the nearest train, than actually treat you properly and with respect)...
Now - it is true that poor over taxed lil americans will have to pay for it in their taxes - but seriously - you pay less than $3 a gallon for petrol - we pay the equivalent of $12 and thats got nothing to do with NHS taxes... you honestly dont know you are born in comparison to most of europe...
I suspect that, if its done properly, only the people who benefit will pay, in as much as if you state on your taxes you have a personal/family/job related paid healthcare plan - you wont pay - and if you dont and arent elegible for medicare/aid you will... but think about it - the only difference really is that you pay probably about the same amount to the government instead of either out of your wage to the company for coverage or to a private supplier...
I am not saying the NHS is perfect - you could barely find a greater critic than me after what I have been put through by the NHS locally - but even done in a half-assed way subsidised healthcare is better than nothing... and done properly it could revolutionise the health system in the US and as a result the health of the people in general...
This is not some sort of communista plot - you are not going to get invaded by hairy blokes driving Ford Edsels (seriously, that grill - bad FORD pervy stylist). Neither are you going to transform overnight into russian oligarchs with various blonde attractive 'daughters' who make Maisy van der Kamp look like rebecca of sunnybrook farm... (curious?, look up the name, seriously NSFW*). You wanted change and now you've been given it - and to a degree its up to you all to make it work and make use of it...
*Not Suitable for Work (and in the case of that particular pretty girl, I wouldnt be eating or cooking or doing anything with food at the time...)