Sorry to have to make you back up your claims! I know it's tough work, particularly in this case.
https://berniesanders.com/issues/how-bernie-pays-for-his-proposals/
Yes, huge increase in taxes, huge increase in government.
https://berniesanders.com/issues/how-bernie-pays-for-his-proposals/
http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/08/news/economy/sanders-income-jobs/
A no-name economist becomes famous because he writes an analysis that suggests Bernie's plan will fix the entire economy. A lot of other economists say terrible things about the analysis.
Who is right, the one economist who wrote it and seems to be the only one willing to stand by it, or the other economists who disagree with it?
Go ahead and accept this as a reasonable analysis if you like, but until many economists agree then I'm going to take it with a whole lot of salt.
http://money.cnn.com/2016/02/08/news/economy/sanders-income-jobs/
http://www.ibtimes.com/election-2016-do-sanders-economic-plans-add-cost-his-revolution-2326247
Yet another article that says huge tax increases, huge increase in government.
http://www.ibtimes.com/election-2016-do-sanders-economic-plans-add-cost-his-revolution-2326247
Bernie's plans are economically viable, no matter what the NYT (a shill for Hillary who
routinely alters columns to make Bernie look bad regardless of the facts) would have you believe.
I think you are trying to debate a different question.
I'm saying, "His plans cost 18 billion," but I don't think you're disputing this.
You're saying, "His plans include huge increases in taxes to pay for his huge increases in spending." I'm not disputing this. I think it's the absolute wrong way to go, and the articles you've suggested say such rosy things like, "This puts us more in line with the EU in terms of GDP of government spending" but this is not a good thing for the US. And if you move the discussion to recently democratic countries that have chosen socalist paths, such as those in South America, you find disasterous results.
Those countries that succeeded (if you call the many financial failures and continuing slow burn failure of the EU "success") went from essential monarchy to democratic socialism. Their culture included the idea that the government, paternalistic in nature, was primarily responsible responsible to provide and care for its citizens. So socialistic policies makes sense for their culture.
You take the US, though, largely built on the idea that the government is limited and citizens are meant to tend to their own needs, and the government only step in for crisis and tragedy, and force a different mindset, you're going to find it a very different result altogether.
The only reason Sanders is making headway is because people don't understand macro economics, and they are voraciously eating the idea that the rich are too rich and must be taxed heavily.
Now here's the rub - I simply believe these changes will adversely impact everyone - including the middle class.
You believe these changes will be positive for everyone, except, perhaps, those you declare unworthy of their wealth.
So of course I cannot support high tax, big government, citizen coddling Bernie Sanders. I've already been a significant victim of Obama's healthcare act which wasn't supposed to affect the middle class.
But I think we can both agree on one thing - Bernie stands for 18 billion on new taxes, new spending, and doubled federal government.
You like it, I don't.