I'm not really trying to change anyone's mind, and I'm sure that most people who read this will remain utterly convinced that the NHS is a horrendous system which rations healthcare and routinely leaves those it deems 'worthless' to die, but for most Britons the NHS is an enormous source of pride and I would imagine almost everyone who was born in the UK has at least one reason to be enormously grateful to it. So, just as you would feel compelled to step in if a group of people with very little experience of it were pontificating on the pros and cons of the Second Amendment, naturally I get defensive about the lies and disinformation I am exposed to daily as healthcare reform in this country is debated. Especially when the reforms that are being proposed here would lead to a system that's nothing like the NHS.
And fyi, Britain is not a socialist country, not is it a "parliamentary monarchy." It's a parliamentary democracy. The queen is a titular figurehead with no real power who on balance costs the country nothing.
And on the subject of taxation, well, I'm not tax expert, but a brief look at tax rates over here (I leave that to our accountant and just let my wife sign the check at tax time

) suggests that taxation is actually a little bit higher here than there. Of course it's hard to compare as the UK only has three tax brackets and not six, and then there's no state income tax over there, nor sales tax, and I believe that wages are comparatively higher there too, but on the whole, I don't really think that paying slightly higher taxes for healthcare of a comparable quality (sorry, but it is) that is available to EVERYONE without any cost is such a bad deal. I guess that makes me a socialist.