:142smilie :142smilie
http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2012...production-due-to-low-demand/?test=latestnews
http://www.foxnews.com/leisure/2012...production-due-to-low-demand/?test=latestnews
Thanks for closing the political forum, Jack
:0074
Maybe GM should have had some forethought and instead of paying out millions of dollars in bonuses to already overpaid assembly line workers, they could have used some of that money to reduce the number of people laid off.
GM should have went bankrupt so they could get an entirely different leadership team instead of more of the same which will have them begging for taxpayer dollars again sooner rather than later.
Wasn't trying to make it political :facepalm: Just reporting on the failure of the electric car
GM should have went bankrupt so they could get an entirely different leadership team instead of more of the same which will have them begging for taxpayer dollars again sooner rather than later.
I don't think it is funny but, it is another example of how the free market works and, even though The Obama said he would buy one of these cars, unless a product merits, it fails no matter how much of our money the government pours into it.
Maybe GM should have had some forethought and instead of paying out millions of dollars in bonuses to already overpaid assembly line workers, they could have used some of that money to reduce the number of people laid off.
GM should have went bankrupt so they could get an entirely different leadership team instead of more of the same which will have them begging for taxpayer dollars again sooner rather than later.
The problem, Chadman - I think most of that growth was in China.....where no US taxes are collected.
Fuck the liberals is what the public is saying here, who the fuck wants an electric car, nobody...:0008
Making the arguement that GM failure impacts hundreds of other businesses seems reasonable on the surface but, it assumes that without GM, those cars would not be sold. In reality, without GM the demand is still there for automobiles so people would buy other brands and therefore positively impact those hundreds of businesses that supply Ford, Toyota, etc. In fact, the auto industry overall would be stronger with some consolidation.
The bonuses were paid to both management and hourly staff so they could, "ensure they didn't lose their employees to other companies."
I'm not sure what other companies are recruiting $75 an hour assembly line workers but, I think the point is why not book those dollars and either lessen the impact of layoffs or help to ensure you can cover a future downturn in business.
Making the arguement that GM failure impacts hundreds of other businesses seems reasonable on the surface but, it assumes that without GM, those cars would not be sold. In reality, without GM the demand is still there for automobiles so people would buy other brands and therefore positively impact those hundreds of businesses that supply Ford, Toyota, etc. In fact, the auto industry overall would be stronger with some consolidation.
Wagoner's retirement payout, the Chevy Volt and these bonuses only prove that it is business as usual at GM...that is not good news for anyone regardless of who is president.
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