Quote from lemeeeplay:
I like Ben Stein. He gets it!
http://finance.yahoo.com/expert/article/yourlife/127875;_ylt=AmdIlsMuWjDRzRLURs8l_3a7YWsA
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Somehow, we can give bailouts to investment banks where the top dogs make hundreds of millions a year for running the company into the ditch and wrecking the whole credit picture in America. Somehow we can have bailouts for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, whose bosses were trading on the credit of the taxpayers to make themselves rich while pumping up a serious housing bubble.
Amazingly, we can have whole fleets of C-130's fly to remote areas of Iraq and Afghanistan with pallets of hundred dollar bills piled from floor to ceiling. Then we can pass them out to warlords who make tea for our soldiers one hour and blow their guts out the next. We can send CIA operatives into Somalia and give millions, maybe hundreds of millions, to warlords to fight other killers.
But we cannot find it in our hearts to save our fellow Americans in Ohio and Michigan and Indiana who make the cars and trucks that about half of us buy?
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Quote from Constantine:
From what I gather, the government really doesn't have anything to lose as the current bill takes form. Last money in and the first money out with interest, kinda like the mafia. But I do support the short term financing of the US auto companies, its the least we can do given that they built this country in the 20th century.
Quote from ba1:
I have long been critical of the de-industrialization of America as self destruction that reflects multiple errors in our political and economic system. However any solution that includes 90% of GM's senior managers and the UAW should be a nonstarter. My best guess is that the start of a healthy American auto industry would be half the employment, few of the old managers, in the hands of some entrepreneur that paid real, personal cash for his substantial share.
Or alternatively a bankruptcy liquidation, that made room for a new, more technology oriented car company. Bailing out ineffective GM managers and the UAW is ultimately bad for the country and its currency, probably sooner now than later.