US carmakers take bail-out plea before Congress - again (2nd Roundup)
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By Chris Cermak Dec 4, 2008, 17:38 GMT
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By stepping outside of the authority granted to them by the Constitution, meddling in private industry, and in a large part causing the economic problems that have adversely affected the domestic auto industry, the federal and state governments have made every taxpayer liable should they fail. This money should be in the form of a settlement instead of a loan.
By doing the same thing in the banking industry, they have also made us liable for bank failures. By then supporting the banks in their illegal and predatory loan activities the government is complicit and we are now liable to every home owner who's property is foreclosed on and every business that has been forced to close because of banking practices.
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why should we the taxpayers have to prop up these pension funds and jobs that are worth nothing? Our whole economy is on artificial life support and everything the congress does is just digging the hole deeper. We will never get out.
let these businesses collapse, let the housing market collapse
if you have not watched for the last 8 years, here is how it works:
Dems impress their weak-minded, automaton, sychophants with angry speech on an issue
Dems then let it sit for a time
Dems then vote for the bailout
or the war funding
or the free trade pact
or more war funding
or the wiretap authority
and their weak-minded, automaton, sychophants buy it all, and vote for someone who will jerk them off the best. Great job, eh?
enjoy.
I watched this one on C-Span. I have to give Senators Dodd and Shelby points for style. Mister Zandy deftly slipped an excellent excuse into Senator Shelby's pocket while everyone was watching, but almost no one noticed. Dodd and Shelby let the junior senator from Tennessee play the role of 'bad cop' with the UAW boss and Chrysler.
At least two of the Big Three, Ford and GM, will get the money they are requesting. Chrysler might well be left out in the cold.
None of them should be getting this kind of money from the government and if Chris Dodd's questioning is an indicator of things to come, American Auto has just become a cadet branch of the military-industrial complex.
I don't suggest anyone despair just yet. We might get lucky and the dollar will hyper-inflate before any of this can be fixed in stone.
Its rather deplorable that a government would give charity the wealthiest of a nation, the auto corporations and its CEOs, while its poor and unemployed have taken to standing in food lines because of its bad economic policies.
34 billion could go a long way to helping the homeless and unemployed get back on their feet and jumpstart the U.S. economy back into production. Instead it looks like Congress is poised to line the pockets of multi-billionaires with a few billion more. Capitalism at its finest.
Yes lets all contribute to having robots (that have long since displaced human workers) produce shiny new $30,000 cars that no one can afford anyway because we're sleeping in cardboard boxes on the street.
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