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Do You Favor A Government Loan To The Detroit 3?

3958 messages,  Last post on Oct 02, 2009 at 4:52 PM

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What is this discussion about? Legislation


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#1590 of 3958
Re: . [kernick] by fintail
Dec 14, 2008 (7:38 am)
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Replying to: kernick (Dec 14, 2008 5:55 am)

The same reason you decry my lack of logic . Logic isn't relevant to public sector actions nor the spending of public funds. Sadly logic has barely more influence in private sector decisions either. Logic is a very minor part of the human condition. Emotion and ego will always trump it.
 
I just find it amusing that we are still in the midst of one of the most criminal "bailouts" in the history of the world, and are decades deep into some of the worst foreign aid and intervention policies in human history, and the idea of spending a fraction of it to aid a domestic industry receives far more castigation than decisions a million times more destructive.
 
The Feds love to print their wallpaper fiat greenbacks...print a few more with serious conditions to aid actual Americans for once. Make the conditions strict and irrevocable. Fail to meet the terms, and you lose it all. Just like mortgaging a house.
 
Political lobbying should be illegal and made nearly a capital offense.
 
A deeply centralized government with a dependent mass of braying sheeple citizenry is the ultimate goal of the globalist "capitalists". They've created it in maybe 80% of those in the EU and they seek to create the same in the upcoming NAU. With their thought policing, this time the pendulum won't swing back.
#1591 of 3958
Re: . [lemko] by fintail
Dec 14, 2008 (7:41 am)
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Replying to: lemko (Dec 14, 2008 6:11 am)

It really proves who controls the legislators, especially those in certain areas who have been bitterly anti-union for ages. This is revenge, nothing more. Don't bite the hand that feeds you, and fight for a flawed ideal of completely unregulated "capitalism", no matter the consequences nor the economic terrorists who control it.
 
I don't see any of them crying about public sector unions with their far-above-market perks and lack of workplace accountability...what is going to happen when those pensions come due...I smell another bailout. And their compensation won't be affected.
#1592 of 3958
Re: . [fintail] by lemko
Dec 14, 2008 (7:47 am)
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Replying to: fintail (Dec 14, 2008 7:41 am)

Heck, take a look at New Jersey. The public sector unions have that whole state held hostage. Property taxes over there are absolutely insane!
#1593 of 3958
Re: Listened to Ed today [tired_old_dave] by iwant12
Dec 14, 2008 (8:21 am)
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Replying to: tired_old_dave (Dec 13, 2008 6:40 pm)

Dave, I meant Drive, not Wheels. Wheels is that Chambers guy. If there has to be a car czar, I would suggest Ed Wallace for that post. He's one of the few who knows what's going on. FWIW, I don't think you're a shill for Ed. Anyone who reads his column will be an instant fan. Go Ed Wallace!
#1594 of 3958
Re: Ford's tough [lemko] by driver100
Dec 14, 2008 (8:36 am)
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Replying to: lemko (Dec 13, 2008 2:30 pm)

One man's trash is another man's treasure. As far as I'm concerned, my old Caddy and Buick are worth their weight in 24K gold and flawless diamonds.
 
Lem, I have had Fords, GMs and Chryslers for most of my life. No real problems, some like my 1988 Corsica fell apart after about 60,000 miles, but I was quite satisfied.
 
Then my wife tried out a 1999 Mercedes. We had a loaner that was 10 years old while her car came in. That 10 year old loaner was better than any American car I had owned or rented, including Cadillacs. I would rather have a car like a Jetta that has some engineering, some joy of driving, some feel of the road, basic safety features added at no optional cost - like traction control and multiple airbags - than a Cadillac.
 
I don't think you have ever driven a Maxima, Infinity, Accura, BMW or Mercedes or you wouldn't think so highly of GM. I have rented new Impalas and Buicks and they are boxes on wheels, with no feel for the road, built by people who want to build a car that can just pass the most basic consumer test, lots of metal and an exterior show of being comparable, but in truth, sadly lacking. Bail outs or loans, it doesn't matter, the cars have to vastly improve before people are going to buy them and trust the D3 again.
#1595 of 3958
Re: . [fintail] by kernick
Dec 14, 2008 (8:42 am)
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Replying to: fintail (Dec 14, 2008 7:38 am)

 
I just find it amusing that we are still in the midst of one of the most criminal "bailouts" in the history of the world, and are decades deep into some of the worst foreign aid and intervention policies in human history, and the idea of spending a fraction of it to aid a domestic industry receives far more castigation than decisions a million times more destructive.
 
The logic is if you don't like the past 99 bad decisions, why do you support bad decision #100? I don't support all 100! Each and every time, I'd say - no. You seem to use the last 99 bad decisions, to then say well I like who's getting #100. You're playing favorites, for some sort of revenge/jealousy reason. And if #101 is for farmer subsidies, and #102 is for oil company subsidies and #103 is for construction company subsidies, I'm against it. I'm not going to pick and choose what waste or giveaways I like. Be against them all.
#1596 of 3958
Re: Ford's tough [driver100] by dieselone
Dec 14, 2008 (8:54 am)
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Replying to: driver100 (Dec 14, 2008 8:36 am)

Then my wife tried out a 1999 Mercedes. We had a loaner that was 10 years old while her car came in. That 10 year old loaner was better than any American car I had owned or rented, including Cadillacs. I would rather have a car like a Jetta that has some engineering, some joy of driving, some feel of the road, basic safety features added at no optional cost - like traction control and multiple airbags - than a Cadillac.
 
That has pretty much been my experience too. When I had a 2000 Jetta GLS Tdi, I compared it to my grandpa's 2000 Park Ave that cost $15k more. What a joke. The fit-n-finish along with the quality of materials and the tactile feel of the switchgear in the Jetta were worlds ahead of the Park Ave. The only advantage the Park Ave had was it was huge in comparison and it had sofa comfy seats. While VW reliability is often questioned, I didn't have any trouble with mine, and my grandpa's Park Ave was always in the shop with various expensive failures. I'd bet a '00 Jetta TDI has a resale value that's probably double that of a '00 Park Ave now.
 
It was the same way when I owned an '01 Nissan Pathfinder and a '00 Suburban simultaneously. The Pathfinder shamed the Suburban in terms of materials, fit-n-finish, ride control, powertrain refinement, and the PF felt like a bank fault in terms of overall tightness when compared to the Suburban. I'd drive them on washboard surfaces on a gravel road I often traveled that the Pathfinder could go 50 mph on while driving with one hand, that the Suburban would literally start to self-destruct with the suspension slamming all over the place and the dash literally reverberating to the point parts would fall of at 25 mph. I'd have to drive with both hands to maintain control. It was that bad. One time I actually had the overhead console that enclosed the rear HVAC controls fall from the ceiling while driving down that dirt road. It got to the point if I had to go that way, I'd only take the PF, and when I turned the PF in on lease, I would avoid that road with the Suburban.
 
Now that was nearly 10 years ago and GMs newer interior designs and refinement seem to be much better.
#1597 of 3958
Re: . [kernick] by fintail
Dec 14, 2008 (9:03 am)
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Replying to: kernick (Dec 14, 2008 8:42 am)

But that logic isn't reflected in reality. The smug politicos who rant against the excesses of the big 2.5 while their own fortunes are built upon lies and robbery aren't going to suddenly stop aiding bad decisionmakers after they decide to not aid the automakers. This is not the beginning of a trend, this is a simple act of revenge by self-titled capitalists, and it will soon be business as normal in terms of pissing away the dwindling American future to the globalist pseudo-capitalists. The next three who apply for aid are almost certainly going to get it (especially if they have friends in the Fed), the previous who have applied have received it. It makes no difference.
#1598 of 3958
Re: Ford's tough [driver100] by lemko
Dec 14, 2008 (9:47 am)
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Replying to: driver100 (Dec 14, 2008 8:36 am)

I've had my experiences with VW and never again! An ex girlfriend of mine had a new 1994 Jetta that was constantly breaking. The car ate CV joints for breakfast, was and was plagued with electrical, cooling, and braking gremlins. The service people at VW were as surly as Tony Soprano after he caught his wife cheating on him and somebody ran over his dog.
 
I did consider a new 1989 Mercedes 560SEL right around the time I bought my 1989 Cadillac Brougham, but the car was $73,600 - more than twice what I paid for my Caddy. It was a good car and the W126 generation seemed like the last really great Mercedes. The 1992 generation S-Class was an overwrought tank currently favored by Russian mafiosi in NE Philly. My brother-in-law has a 2000 S430 that has been plagued by problems ever since he had it. It didn't bode well when I saw it for the first time, opened the passenger door, and the sill plate fell off.
 
Maxima = cheesy Nissan interior and bizarre styling.
 
Infinity = Styled by space aliens.
 
Acura = Honda Deluxe. The RL would've been nice had they put a V-8 in it instead of a puny V-6.
 
BMW = Absolutely deplore the image that goes with the car and absolutely fear the repair and maintenance costs. They once were somewhat attractive until Bangle ruined them.
 
You might not think much of my Buicks, but they are extremely reliable, durable, and I can depend on them getting me to work for decades.
#1599 of 3958
Re: Ford's tough [dieselone] by driver100
Dec 14, 2008 (9:54 am)
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Replying to: dieselone (Dec 14, 2008 8:54 am)

Now that was nearly 10 years ago and GMs newer interior designs and refinement seem to be much better.
 
It hasn't changed very much. I had to drive a 3 year old Suburban a few months ago. I don't think there is any engineering in that vehicle. The seats are comfortable and you have a lot of steel that might help in case of an accident. No feel for the road, thin steering wheel, no logic to the placement of instruments. I couldn't wait to get out of it.
 
There is a lack of engineering and pride. The attitude is design it and get it on the road the cheapest way possible - with parts from the lowest bidder.

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