Originally posted by: chess9
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: DeathBUA
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Originally posted by: Red Dawn
Originally posted by: CADsortaGUY
Good. The bailout needed to fail.
Ok that's fine, now what happens to the economy when the result is millions of unemployed? That's what concerns me, not the plight of the Union.
You mean - what happens to the economy
IF the result is millions of unemployed.
Then other car manufacturers will pick up the slack. Americans buy cars so there is still a healthy market for them. Not stupidly large numbers like yesteryear but still plenty to sustain well structured auto manufacturers.
File, restructure, and come back stronger. It's the only way to have a healthy industry for the long term.
How would the other manufacturers pick up the slack?? If two out of the three fail thats a HUGE production hole to fill. I'd be willing to bet they'd be unable to pick up the slack for a few years.
And the economy will suffer if these companies go bankrupt. Thinking that it wouldn't is asinine. Sure they can restructure but what about all those suppliers...surely you can't expect them to all restructure and file for bankruptcy too?
IF 2 of the 3 fail - do you really think they'll just disappear? I'm not naive enough to fall for that sort of BS and neither should you. They won't just disappear if they file chap 11.
The economy will suffer longer if we just throw money at these companies and they don't get their shit straight. Again, there will be car demand regardless of what happens to the big 3(really only 2 supposedly in dire straights) so suppliers will have approx the same demand no matter what happens because people buy cars.
They will file Chapter 11, IF they can get DIP financing. Otherwise, they will need a merger with a viable company that can support them (unlikely), or they will liquidate under Chapter 7.
I wish only the best for the auto companies and especially their workers, but the chickens have finally come to roost from years of mismanagement by leaders of the Big Three. This is an example of a collosal failure of capitalism, much like what's happened on Wall Street, including today's news about Maddow's 50 billion dollar Ponzi scheme.
We were all fearful that Communism would bring down Capitalism, yet it's Capitalism's excesses that have brought Capitalism to its knees. If Marx were alive today, the irony for him would be rich indeed.
-Robert