Quote from CaptainObvious:
Here's a novel idea. Lets hold the banks to the same standards that we're expecting from the auto makers. And lets be damn clear that home values aren't going down because GM makes shitty cars. Credit isn't locked up because the UAW has a golden contract. And the entire worlds economy isn't in the tank because the big 3 ain't profitable. The banks did all that. Chew on that for awhile before judging the automakers.
Quote from KK70:
Question:
Lets say the Big Three go bankrupt. Toyota, Honda will then surely expand their manufacturing base in the US. They employ most/all the workers laid off by the Big Three and produce much better quality vehicles too.
What is the problem with that?
Quote from CaptainObvious:
Here's a novel idea. Lets hold the banks to the same standards that we're expecting from the auto makers. And lets be damn clear that home values aren't going down because GM makes shitty cars. Credit isn't locked up because the UAW has a golden contract. And the entire worlds economy isn't in the tank because the big 3 ain't profitable. The banks did all that. Chew on that for awhile before judging the automakers.
Quote from Angrycat:
The UAW looses all of its members. The UAW henchmen have a problem with that.
Quote from Angrycat:
Great idea. Why are you under the impression that if somebody doesn't want to bail out people who make shitty cars that nobody wants they are willing to bailout banks? Speaking for myself, the "systemic risk" is overblown BS designed solely to give politicians more power and incompetent, insolvent banks should be allowed to die.
Robbing competent people of wealth which they invest in businesses that produce things people actually want and handing over to people who only produce crap nobody wants is not logical. The auto companies and insolvent banks are failures. Subsidizing failure will give us more of it.