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EDITORIAL: Taken for a ride

Underlying Barack Obama's support for bailing out the U.S. auto industry has always been the notion that federal bureaucrats and environmentalists know better than Detroit executives what kind of cars should be on the market.

And it's no secret what kind of cars Mr. Obama and his progressive allies would like to see Detroit churn out: Boxy "green" models that eventually wean Americans off of evil internal combustion engines.


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Oh sure, Mr. Obama has paid lip service to reworking the union contracts that Big Three leaders signed off on for years in an effort to ensure labor peace while pushing the day of reckoning down the road until they were safely retired.

But the ultimate goal of his auto industry rescue will be to dictate to Detroit -- even more rigidly than before -- precisely what it must build.

"This restructuring," the president said in a recent address, "as painful as it will be in the short term, will mark not an end, but a new beginning for a great American industry ... that is creating new jobs, unleashing new prosperity and manufacturing the fuel-efficient cars and trucks that will carry us toward an energy-independent future."

The problem with all this should be obvious, but apparently isn't to many in the administration: These wonderful green cars aren't always favorites of consumers.

Thus, the Los Angeles Times reports this week, that Obama's "vision" requires another spike in gas prices to get buyers more interested in high-mileage, low pollution vehicles. And, "Second, the cars Detroit produces must satisfy consumer tastes and preferences. Marketing data show that a vehicle's size and the image it bestows on its driver play major roles in buyers' decisions."

Wow, really? Consumers want a product they like and enjoy? What a concept.

It's something Mr. Obama should consider as his administration meddles in the boardroom -- and if he does, he probably won't like what finds.

For instance, the Times reports that Mercedes-Benz and BMW sold more than 33,000 cars in March, which represents a 50 percent larger market share than all hybrids combined.

The notion that Detroit ignored the fuel-efficient market is utter nonsense. Over the past 30 years -- after the disastrous decade of the 1970s -- Detroit has produced dozens and dozens of high mileage models, but they were too often ignored by buyers. Government mileage requirements practically dictated product lines, forcing General Motors, Ford and Chrysler to make vehicles that lost money in order to meet Washington's fleet standards.

Yes, American automakers made mistakes. Yes, at times they have lagged behind Japanese and European competitors in terms of price and quality. And, yes, the market for "greener" cars may eventually attract more than just feel-good niche consumers.

But the idea that the president can save the domestic auto industry by strong-arming companies into making vehicles that many consumers don't want is folly -- and arrogance of dangerous proportions.

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Fair and Balanced Fred wrote on April 10, 2009 07:14 PM: Going way out on a limb here:

Hey Wade,

Are you the gay doc with passive-aggressive personality disorder, whom everybody hates (with the same name} who drives a box with a fancy nameplate made in England?

If so, the crew thanks you for the cheapest, ingratiating sandwiches you could find. BTW: see a psychiatrist.

To answer your question: when I drive down the road I see import after import after import, and bankrupt Hummer dealers, plus discontinued lines of boxy Navigators, Suburbans, etc.

And these pigs want us to bail them out.

Thanks, E.


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Steve wrote on April 10, 2009 06:45 PM: Let the automakers go bankrupt. That is the capitalist way.

We should never have bailed out AIG et al. It is just becoming one giant bailout for everyone but taxpayers.

We need a good Depression in this country.


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Leric Goodman wrote on April 10, 2009 02:57 PM: The Editorial Board furiously pummels a Straw Man while ignoring the point.

The real point is that the main use for petroleum in the United States is for fuel for cars. We can no longer afford to continue to burn petroleum in our cars, either as individuals, or as a nation, or as a planet.

As individuals, we could not afford it when gas prices reached $4.00 per gallon. We can barely afford it at $2.00 a gallon. There is a limited supply of petroleum and the demand for it will grow as the world comes out of recession. Prices can be expected to rise again to prices that are beyond affordable.

As a nation, using gasoline to run cars results in a huge shift of wealth overseas to petroleum exporting countries. Many of those are not our friends. Some, such as Russia, Iran, and Venezuela, were emboldened by high petroleum prices.

As a planet, we have this "Global Warming" problem possibly caused by the carbon dioxide generated by, among other things, burning gasoline in cars. Now we don't know whether "Global Warming" means that temperatures just go up, up, up, or whether it results in temperatures going up and down and up and down. But either way it works out that the carrying capacity of the planet will either go down, down, down or will fluctuate.

Those are the problems with the internal combustion engine. If we want to preserve our way of life, we must move away from it as quickly as possible. We either change the engines in our cars or sacrifice the American way of life, American power, and quite possibly the survival of the human species.

Our choice: Internal combustion or Planet of the Apes.


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Ken wrote on April 10, 2009 02:29 PM: Patrick -- the main difference between Chrysler then and now is that then they went bankrupt without filing. They had creditors who renegotiated contracts before they had to file for bankruptcy. The government did play a role in their rescue but largely it was in providing government backed loans based on the fact that they had worked out arrangements with their creditors. Even Jimmy Carter wasn't going to give them money without a plan.

Fast forward to now. There are STILL no arrangements worked out. The US Government has been nothing more than an ATM. I don't care who we bailout however a working plan needs to be in-place before they get ANY money.

We have thrown away roughly $30B to Chrysler and GM since last October. Every two months we are told they have two months to come up with a plan. I will bet anyone here that when the latest two months are up, they will get more money and we will be told the next plan is due in two months.

So, there is the difference. In 1979 the government and Chrysler responsibily worked with creditors and actually enacted a plan. In 2008-2009 two administrations have only served as rich uncle while the petulant child (read: UAW) kicks and screams, "Gimme!"


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Shelly wrote on April 10, 2009 01:50 PM: Hey, funny thing happened on my way to the "free market", I note that China is pumping out more cars than anyone! Matter of fact, their #1!!!

Hey, isn't China a communist country? ROFLMAO indeed!

Oh, if it wasn't for the US military providing for the safe production transportation and distribution of gasoline and diesel, do you think we would have the current lifestyle?

Ya'll better get ready for a much more humble lifestyle! Oh, and sign your waivers wherein you declare you will not accept social security or medicare/medicaid.

Oh, and you anti socialist types, stop drinking water from the community well, and using our sewers and libraries and roads and schools and airplanes and get yer own cops, jails, judges, firemen and rec centers! Ya'll know those were built by the tax taking your money without asking you!

But, I know if any of you were born in Bangladesh, as one of 9 children, you would be a self made millionaire but the time you were 30, right? Have a home? A car or 3? A retirement and health care in your old age?

Nope, you won the womb lottery (hat tip to W Buffett) and were born in America.


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import woes wrote on April 10, 2009 01:32 PM: Vegas,

Do you think that only GM, Ford and Chrysler are seeking bailouts?!

BMW is seeking funds from the German government;
Toyota is asking Japan for $2billion in loans (US News Report; March 4, 2009);
Fiat...seeking loans;
Peugeot....seeking loans;
Honda..."Honda Motor Co. said it is seeking a government loan to help shore up funds at its U.S. operations.."
Mazada..."Mazda Motor Corp. is also considering a request for government loans, spokesman Toyota Tanaka said today."
All of this is available on Bloomberg News!


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SamT wrote on April 10, 2009 12:23 PM: @patrick: "Socialism has proven time and time again to be the only successful method of organizing civilization."

ROFLMAO


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John F wrote on April 10, 2009 12:16 PM: "Underlying Barack Obama's support for bailing out the U.S. auto industry has always been the notion that federal bureaucrats and environmentalists know better than Detroit executives what kind of cars should be on the market."

I don't know if Barack Obama knows better than Detroit executives what kind of cars should be on the market, but SOMEBODY sure does. You know, somebodies like Toyota, Nissan, Hyundai, and Mercedes who keep beating Detroit's head in each year.

Detroit auto makers will get back on their feet only when they start building cars people want to buy. It's been thirty years or more since Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and the like started beating up on Detroit and still they haven't learned.

The editors say that because Americans aren't buying GM's and Chrysler's fuel efficient models we can conclude that Americans don't want fuel-efficient cars. What utter hogwash. Americans aren't buying those cars because they're busy buying the fuel-efficient models being produced by Toyota. When Detroit can build a fuel-efficient car that can compete with a Camry people will buy it.


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patrick wrote on April 10, 2009 12:11 PM: Socialism has proven time and time again to be the only successful method of organizing civilization.

There is not a country today with a purely capitalist economy, and there has never been one, and for that matter, there will never be one. Fact check that one.

Since there has never been, and will never be a purely capitalist economy in the entire history of the world, what system has there been if not socialist, or some blend of socialism?

"Mixed"? Exactly what does this mean; that only "part" of the economy is based on socialism? Ok, then, like nearly every other civilization this country has always had a mixed socialist/capitalist system. Fine.

Today, we are merely arguing about the best "blend" of the two; fine.


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patrick wrote on April 10, 2009 12:06 PM: How's Chrysler doing? Anyone remember when the government bailed them out?

How many jobs were saved, how many Americans were better off, how is today any different and why are the same people who opposed that bailout, even willing to show their faces today and argue against another bailout?

Don't people ever learn?


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