You made two assumptions in that one statement that I would not automatically make, A) that "superluminal" expansion happened and that there was a "beginning of time'. Both of these are "assumptions".
As I understand it, the tenets of basic physics says that physics work the same backwards in time than to do forwards. If we take the velocities of all galaxies we currently see, and run them back in time, they originate from what seems to be a single point. I wouldn't call that a blind assumption. As far as the beginning of time goes, maybe it wasn't. Maybe brane theory is right, and the universe is cyclic. Time (and scientific testing) will tell.
Ok. I'll go with that. Note that this (and the acceleration) are actually 'subjective interpretations" of the redshift phenomenon.
Subjective, how? Does light change speeds?
Ya, but we don't even necessarily agree on 1.

Have you ever read Alfven's "Bang" theory? Nothing actually collected to a "singular clump" and it wasn't so much a "creation event" as a "cyclical process". I can try to round you up a link to his paper in a bit. I have to do a little work first.
I think the current idea in mainstream science is that, by running time backwards, everything in our observable universe goes to a single point. At that point current physics break down. Time becomes irrelevant. That could be wrong, sure, but it'd take a lot of work to come up with a workable and testable hypothesis on that point. That's where teh brane theory guys are at, I assume. But as it's currently understood, time started there, as well as space dimensions. And the strong and weak nuclear forces, the electromagnetic force, and gravity. There's no before. Like the whole "What's north of the north pole?" bit.
We also know that the *MOST* likely "cause" of plasma "expansion/acceleration" is the EM field.
My understanding is that the fabric of space is stretching, and the higgs field has something to do with it.
Is the source or mechanism of solar wind acceleration observable?
Not sure how that applies to universal expansion. Do you have something that tells you its the same mechanism? I'd like to hear your details on it!
It's more than that however. They created a mythical negative pressure entity too.
Here's my understanding of it. Let's say you have a one dimensional graph. Let's call it the X axis. Our dot is sitting there at 29. It took 29 "x" pressure to blow it down that line for it to be sitting where it is. Now, we throw 5 pressure on the other side of it, blowing it back to 24. Is 5 a positive number? Sure. But it's negative on the X axis. Science loves to make measurements with a frame of reference. From the reference of the X axis, what happened was a negative pressure event.
If we changed the placeholder term for a second it becomes indistinguishable from magic, or from religion. Predictions based on invisible rabbits really aren't that impressive.
Nah. Let's call it "X". So it becomes, "Something we call 'X' is causing universal expansion, and the process by which it is causing this is not directly observable." That isn't magic. That's just "Name it first, figure out what it is and why the heck it's doing it next".
The problem is that they "sky god" makes not empirical predictions on Earth to actually 'test'. It's only use seems to be related to their one theory.
We don't see quantum effects at macroscopic levels, either. Scale is kind of relevant with this sort of thing, as I understand it.
I don't see how inventing a negative pressure deity has improved out understanding of the universe. Why do they even begin with the assumption that the universe is a closed system in the first place?
I don't think they'd hesitate to change their minds in an instant if some really convincing proof came along.
FYI, we actually parted company at number 1. I can't go back in time to see exactly what happened. I have no idea if the 'bang' as a creation oriented thing, or a cyclical process of some kind. I really can't make a lot of prophetic claims about the past. If however something *IS* causing acceleration NOW, they we should be able to "explain' it with "real" forces of nature, not sky gods that only do things "somewhere out there" where humans can never get to.
If there's no process we know of that can be doing it, something else must be. If we don't know what it is, so we give it a placeholder term so everybody is on the same page when we talk about it, then the hypothesizing and testing can begin.