ponyo
Lifer
- Feb 14, 2002
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Originally posted by: Old Hippie
I find this incredibly scary. :shocked:
Maybe it's because I'm 56 and have grown up when the auto US industry was thriving.
Maybe it's because I remember reading about and seeing the first generation imports from Saab, Toyota, Honda and others. Believe me, those cars were not a pretty sight and servicing was a nightmare.
Maybe it's because I remember the saying "As GM goes, so goes the country".
Maybe it's because I know many more will be affected other than the first tier workers.
Maybe it's because I realize bad decisions were made by Managment and Union officials that are going to drastically effect the health and welfare of the guy that just wants to work his 8 hours and go home to his kids.
I have never been one to kick a guy when he's down and I'm not going to start now.
I can only but hope that people more intelligent than I will work-out some kind of solution.
But for the time being, I'm sitting here with a lump in my throat and a pit in my stomach just thinking about current and past employees on both sides of the fence.
It's not just GM. I never thought I would see icons like Bear Sterns, Lehman, AIG, Merrill Lynch go away in my lifetime. Who would've thought Goldman, Morgan Stanley, and American Express would be fighting for their survival and turn into banks to ask for handouts from the govt. This current downturn is nothing like anything we've experienced since the Great Depression. All these firms survived the GD and now they're gone. In the past downturns, America had great manufacturing base and we exported more than we imported. Most importantly, people didn't have much debt and had some savings. We're entering this mess leveraged more than since the Great Depression and people have no savings to fall back on in case of job loss. Because of all the debt obligations like too large of mortgage, cars, and lifestyle credit cards, American people are screwed if they lose their job with so many people living paycheck to paycheck. In the past, people lived much simpler and with smaller debt so they could hunker down and survive a period of hardship by cutting back and tapping their savings. We don't have that now. Too many business relied on debt and built their business on debt. Same with the consumer with their lifestyle debt. It's going to be Armageddon. We haven't seen anything yet and by the time this is finished, it's going to make what Japan went through after their bubble collapse in the early 90s look like child's play. This debt bubble was the mother of all bubbles and it's going to be ugly and last for years.