Furcifer
Guest
- Joined
- Apr 30, 2007
- Messages
- 13,797
The plan was to transfer government money to the UAW and to leave GM in the stranglehold of the UAW. That plan has now been fully implemented.
I'm not sure where this is coming from. You're the only one I've heard claiming the Bush government was in bed with the unions. I'm not saying you are alone on this, I'm just saying you're the only one I've heard.
And to what end? On a going forward basis the US probably has too much car manufacturing capacity, especially if car companies are forced to pay wages that leaves them uncompetitive with foreign companies.
Please, provide some proof of this claim or stop making it. Several months ago I provided a link showing the average worker at the Camry plant made more than the average GM worker. I'm not saying it isn't possible, I'm just saying no one has proven this to be true.
But those people seem happy enough since they have elected to work at Wal-Mart instead of some place else.
LMFAO. I'd love for you to provide an account of anyone who "elected to work at Wal-Mart instead of some place else". I'd love to hear about someone who turned down an offer at the post office, or teaching or GM to work at Wal-Mart. It should be easy, Wal-Mart is one of the largest employers in the US.
Anyone want to take wagers on me finding 100 accounts of people being treated unfairly by Wal-Mart for every 1 account Dave finds on people "electing to work at Wal-mart"
What has GM done for people in the last thirty years which is remotely as helpful as what Wal-Mart has done? One thing that GM did was charge my 75 year old step mother $450 to change a battery cable on her Cadillac which she eventually sold for a tiny fraction of what an equivalent Honda would have sold for. Don't look for me to be too enthused about GM after that.
What has GM done? How about help create the health and safety standards Wal-Mart seems to violate every chance they get? How about create the class of people who can afford to shop at Wal-Mart on a regular basis? Wal-Mart has a long way to go before the effects of its business practice could ever be measured against what GM has done for this economy.
I one paragraph you managed to compare GM to Wal-Mart and an Accord to a Cadillac (I'm not going to bother pointing out again the issue with the rear mounted battery in the Cadillac to the front mounted Honda
The problem with all your labor unions are good fantasies is that you are staring at massive empirical evidence that this isn't so and yet you cling to your fantasies even when it requires massive unsustainable government bailouts to keep them alive.
What we are staring at is gross negligence on the part of the government by keeping interest rates low while an unregulated Wall Street made loans to Americans they couldn't afford to repay.
