davefoc
Philosopher
Disbelief, did you perform the search Farmall suggested? Trust me. It's enough to make you scream.
GM has demonstrated they're willing to look the other way when they have a dealer doing dirty, as long as they can move the metal. Did you even read what I wrote about Performance Chevrolet? I mean, good God! How long was I going to be forced to stand there while the parts manager did NOTHING? I've even taken my truck there to be worked on. NEVER AGAIN!
For all the talk about quality service, you pay a premium price to be treated with disrespect, with contempt, just so they can take as much of your money as they can lay their hands on. GM damned well ought to know what's happening, and they have demonstrated that when they DO learn of this kind of crap, they just don't care.
When a Subaru dealer tried similar tactics with me, there were consequences to their actions. The salesman was canned, the parts people lost a couple of days pay, IIRC. Where do you think I might buy a new car, should I ever be able to afford one?
I read through some of the stories about Hearst Chevrolet. It seems pretty bad, but I'm not convinced it is completely relevant. When we bought our last Honda the experience was less than perfect. (Agreed on price, sudden appearance of overpriced crap that we didn't want, miscellaneous bad feeling ensued, eventually we only paid $500 for crap we didn't want instead of $1100). In defense of Honda our dealership experiences have been mostly very good.
The situation reminded me a bit of the way Sears used their good name to rip people off with their corrupt auto repair departments. Good companies sometimes decide to sell their good names for a profit. It pisses me off and I usually avoid them thereafter but it happens. Still I'm inclined to think about the GM bailout decision as a separate issue from this or at least see this as just one more issue in the general problem of automobile sales. Pissing people off is good for the short term bottom line but making people happy is costly and only has a payback in the fairly long term.
This is why I think any bailout of GM needs to be configured in such a way that the new managers of GM see their job as building a company for the long term. Any deal that doesn't succeed in producing that is just going to result in a massive loss of taxpayer dollars that will probably harm GM's chances of success more than it will help it.