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The Car Business: Update One

In my post Running on Empty  I pointed out the pending demand for cars.

Number of cars sold in US, 2006   16.38 million units

 9.3 million By US Automakers (5 million by GM)

Number of cars sold in US 2008   14.1 million units

 8.1 million By US Automakers (4 million by GM)

Potential future demand (per year) 16.3 million normal demand plus
2.4 million in ‘pent up’ demand and growth.  9-10 million of these
vehicles will logistically have to be built in the
US.
 

Demand
As the economy moves toward recovery the first wave of demand will
come from those that have kept their job through the recession. 
The 90 plus percent that have been working have been delaying big ticket
items and paying down their debt.  When they see stability in the
workplace, hiring, raises and promotions happening, economic
confidence will return.  Replacing that old car is high on their list.
The next wave will be the newly hired who babied their old heap along
through the recession.  Then will come the people that buy a new car
because they want to as opposed to need to.
Additionally with CAFÉ standards looming there will be urgency on the
part of consumers to get the car they want before they disappear.

 

The current media hype is that we want cars that get good mileage.
They have harped on this theme for years despite the fact that
historically Americans have shown that they will sacrifice mileage for
comfort, power, and convenience.  In the early to mid 80’s there were
several very good cars that had both power and mileage. What they did
not have was comfort and the power was restricted to the load limits of
the small car.  Gas prices were at record highs during this period, yet
these vehicles with high mpg and backed by massive promotion
did not sell. From 1984 through 2008 the top 5 selling cars were midsize.
For most of those years it was either the Ford Taurus or the Toyota Camry. 
SUV models were in the top 10.

 

Supply

With the changes in the marketplace caused by the government
takeover of GM and Chrysler the question is; who will satisfy the
demand?

 

Ford is in the best position. They make the vehicles that will be in high
demand (mid-size cars, pickups, and SUV’s of all sizes.) 
Ford has factories up and running, dealerships, and minimal government
interference. (At least for now)

 

Import brands that manufacture in the US are also in a good position
with the factories they now have. Expansion will be slow due to
recent losses.

 

GM and Chrysler will be mandated to produce those little ‘green’ cars
that only a small minority of buyers are interested in. 
Ideally Dodge should be sold. It is a viable brand in both cars and trucks.
Factories are up and running. The dealerships recently dropped by
Chrysler Corporation will gladly pick up an independent Dodge franchise.
 Cadillac should be sold off by GM. There will be plenty of buyers.

 

Finally there will be the new comers.  The first one is on board.

Penske Automotive Group Inc. purchased the Saturn brand from GM.
This will put Saturn
in the fray of the pending demand cycle.
With dealerships in place and a plan to immediately market cars,
Saturn could become a major brand far into the future. (Full article Here)

A Quick History of Saturn
In the 1980’s GM launched “A new kind of Car Company”.
 It was the Saturn. Early ads showed the factory workers so involved in
quality that they could stop the assembly line at any time they observed
a flaw.  (This was already common practice at GM factories, but woe
onto the one that stops the line for something stupid.) The biggest
positives of this ‘new’ car company was that it was non union and small 
legacy costs. The biggest negative was that it was run by GM
management. The same management that in their hearts did not
believe in small cars.
So Saturn made bland cars with plastic doors and limited life spans.
The
Union eventually got in and Saturn continued to produce the same
bland cars with the same questionable quality (but they did switch to
steel doors). Their advertising campaigns revolved around the friendly
salespeople at the dealerships. (They smiled and patted you on the
back as you signed for your piece of automotive crap.)
In recent years Saturn has upped their image with stylish cars.
Advertising still revolves around the friendly dealership experience.
 An indication that quality is still an issue.
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Common Ground

On Sunday May 17th President Obama appeared at Notre Dame to
address the graduating class.  Traditionally these speeches are pep
talks to propel the graduates forward to their new life beyond the
confines of education.  Obama also received an honorable degree.
In the weeks preceding this event Catholics all over the nation objected.
There were petitions. There were organized protest campaigns.
There was a statement by 14 Catholic Bishops ordering against Obama’s
appearance. All these objections were ignored as Notre Dame moved forward
with their plans.
With this backdrop one would think that the prudent thing to do would be
to give a ‘rah rah on to the future' type of speech.  Not Barrack Obama.
He came to the center of Catholic education and talked about abortion.  
He came to WARN Catholics about their abortion stance.
It’s the closing speech for a campaign started by Nancy Pelosi in 2008.

 

Let’s go back to August 2008 when Nancy Pelosi stated on a TV interview
that the issue of abortion was not settled in the Catholic Church.  
Complete transcript here
 
The comment was answered by the Archbishop of Washington, who said
Pelosi was incorrect and the official catechism of the Catholic Church
on the matter was clear and unchangeable.

 

In February 2009 Pelosi flew to Rome to straighten out the pope on
the churches stance on abortion.

  Complete article

“The Vatican says the pope lectured Pelosi about abortion and assisted
suicide. Pelosi says they talked about poverty and global warming --
and she showed him pictures of her grandchildren.                                                         
"His Holiness took the opportunity to speak of the requirements of the natural
moral law and the Church's consistent teaching on the dignity of human life from
conception to natural death," the Holy See said in a statement.
Benedict
emphasized that "all Catholics, and especially legislators, jurists and those
responsible for the common good of society" should work to create "a just
system of laws capable of protecting human life at all stages of its development."  

The ball has been passed to Obama to confront the Catholic Church on its
stance on abortion. 
He took this Notre Dame opportunity to utter: 
 
When we open up our hearts and our minds to those who may not think
precisely like we do or believe precisely what we believe, that's when we
discover at least the possibility of common ground."   
             
When a lefty with power like Barrack Obama says ‘common ground’ it means
HIS common ground.  When the legislation starts restricting Catholic
hospitals, Catholic schools, and Catholic churches on which side will we
find the hiarchy of Notre Dame?  On which side will we find these graduates?                                
The Camels nose is under the tent.
 
A Side Note on Torture (previously posted at http://cincyconservative.blogtownhall.com/)
The argument by the lefties that we prosecuted the Japanese for
waterboarding is false. The Japanese in WW2 did waterboard our soldiers.
They also performed many illegal torturous acts on our soldiers for which
they were prosecuted. Waterboarding was an add-on charge.
An example would be if a man commits murder, runs from the police,
resists arrest, and assaults an officer. He would be charged for all of these,
but would be prosecuted for murder.
To say that the Japanese were prosecuted for waterboarding is like saying
the murderer in my example was sentenced to death for resisting arrest.
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The Curious Case of Carrie Prejean

Miss California USA, Carrie Prejean was asked a question as part of the
competition for Miss
USA.  The questioner was Perez Hilton who
phrased his question thusly. “
Vermont just became the 5th state to
approve gay marriage, should the other states follow these states and
approve gay marriage?”  Note that in each of these states gay marriage
was imposed by the courts, not voted in by the people.  In every state
that put the question to the voters gay marriage lost.
Carrie answered the question with her personal belief that marriage was
between a man and a women.  She also reflected the opinion of the
majority of her fellow Californians.

 

The left wing hate machine started at full throttle, proceeding to give
Carrie Prejean the ‘Sarah Palin’ treatment.  While Sarah Palin had to
politically maneuver through the criticism and concentrate on her Vice
Presidential campaign, Ms. Prejean has no such encumbrances.
She is fighting back. Yesterday she stated,
"On April 19 on that stage I exercised my freedom of speech, and I was
punished for doing so," said Prejean. "This should not happen in
America,"
she added.

 

In the overall scheme of things a beauty pageant contestant is not on the
radar of a majority of people, they compete and the winner becomes a
goodwill ambassador, participating in parades and community events. 
It’s a low key, non threatening activity.

 

The Clinton regime specialized in the politics of personal destruction, but it
was politician against politician.  What has changed now is the politics of
personal destruction has reached to common people doing common things. 
The other change is that this destruction is not carried out by an office in the
administration but by the supposedly impartial MEDIA.Attacking a beauty
pageant contender because she honestly answered a politically loaded question
will not set well with the public. The curious thing is the media is beyond
caring what the public thinks.
The media no longer reports, they decide.
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According To Doyle

In Wisconsin we have been under the regime of lefty Governor Jim Doyle
since 2003. He has illegally negotiated Casino contracts with the Indians.
He has diverted funds from the Department of Transportation to fund his
pet social projects. (Money that was designated to improve our highways.)  
To replace the raided money he increased automobile license fees by $30. 
After running for re-election on a no tax increase pledge he has proposed one
new tax or fee after another.

 

Two recent proposals go ‘beyond the pale’ (to use an expression presently
in vogue). They also have national implications in light of the recent actions
taken by the Obama administration involving government intervention in the
free market.

 

First, the Cell Phone Rebate.

In response to a 1999 Federal mandate to update wireless 911 systems a
bill was passed in 2003 to add a surcharge to cell phone use through
November 2008. The work was completed early and 25 million dollars is
left over.
Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission rules require that the
money be returned to the cell phone providers to be rebated to their
customers.
Governor Doyle wants to divert this money “back to the
communities’ which really means to patch a hole in his budget. 
He is confiscating money from the free market.     

 

Second, the Education Surcharge.

In the last couple of days a ‘trial balloon’ has been floated about adding a
tuition surcharge on rich students.  The charge would apply to Wisconsin
State Universities and would effect tuitions paid by those making $80,000
or more.

Notice how the definition of RICH is down to $80,000.

 

League of Dorks

One of my distractions that have kept me from blogging of late is Fantasy
Baseball. (dubbed League of Dorks by the sports gal at ESPN.com)
As anyone involved in fantasy sports knows, it’s all in the draft. I am drafted
and ready on all 4 of my teams.  If you search fantasy baseball in any search
engine the results are overwhelming, so I won’t bore you with that aspect.
A lesser talked about aspect is the emotional pick. 
Fantasy baseball is about numbers and statistics that happen to have a
player attached to them.  Sound strategy dictates to go with the numbers. 
The names attached to those numbers are a different story. One might think,
‘wouldn’t it be cool to have (insert favorite player here) on my team?”  
We all think that. We all have those emotional picks on our teams.
I define an emotional pick as a favorite player that may or may not be
justified by statistics.

Here are some of mine:

Kevin Youkilis, Boston Red Sox, 1 team. May be fading in fantasy
value and is prone to minor injuries but he has always been on 1 or more
of my teams.
Yovani Gallardo, Milwaukee Brewers, 1 team. While he may produce
numbers, failing to do so will doom the Brewers and dent my fantasy team.
Coco Crisp Kansas City Royals, 1 team. I like the name and maybe
one day the cereal guy will live up to his potential.
CC Sabathia, New York Yankees (late of the Brewers), 1 team.  He will
produce stats and I have missed him in drafts the last 2 years.
Hope he justifies the chase and the 2nd round draft pick.
Manny Parra and Trevor Hoffman, Milwaukee Brewers, 1 team. 
Free agent Trevor ‘Hells Bells’ Hoffman, the great closing hope, is already
on the disabled list.  This continues Milwaukee’s closing pitcher jinx.  
Manny Parra is all hope and no numbers. But he’s on the hometown team!

 

Any other League of Dorks addicts out there feel free to comment.

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Learnin'

The speed at which President Obama is moving toward socialism is
 alarming. His proclamations and programs come from all directions.
On
March 9th 2009 he unleashed his education agenda.

 

At the Townhall blog The Least Men Standing 

VBushmills wrote an 11 part series called “How Life Will Change
Under Socialism”. 

 Part VI, covers education:

    “In K-thru-12 we can expect a slow pulling back from existing pre-school
baby-sitting programs, replaced by more streamlined European models.
First and foremost will be far more strident requirements that kids learn to
read, and learn to read on time. This means the NEA will learn there's a new
sheriff in town, and failure will not be tolerated.”

 

Obama said, "We need to make sure our students have the
teacher they need to be successful. That means states and school districts
taking steps to move bad teachers out of the classroom. Let me be clear:
if a teacher is given a chance but still does not improve, there is no excuse
for that person to continue teaching."
            To students, Obama said: "Don't even think about dropping out
of school." But he said that reducing the dropout rates also requires
turning around the worst schools, something he asked lawmakers,
parents and teachers to make "our collective (emphasis mine)
responsibility as Americans."

 

Bushmills continues,

     “On into higher education, the useful idiots in academe will once again
be shown how the gods punish by first answering prayers, for degree
programs in Underwater Basket Weaving at
Southern Cal will be out.
In fact about thirty percent of public university curricula will be
unceremoniously tossed out the door, and once again, it's sad to say
 almost of all of it will be the same courses of study conservatives would
like to have seen passed over to the pay-as-you-go format, but were
too timid to fight for.
     Much of what socialism will achieve in the short run, say one
generation, will be things conservatives and families would also
like to have done themselves. This is why I am so melancholy,
for they will get some compliance from strange quarters.”

 Read the whole post here.

 

The “How Life Will Change Under Socialism” series was written just
after the election last November.
It would be well worth your time to review it now.
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Wally World

I have a lefty friend that is totally against Wal-Mart. He will not allow anything
from Wal-Mart in his house.  He recites the same old pabulum about low
wages, no health care, even sub human working conditions.  Low wages
and expensive health care has always been the norm in retail. Do lefties
think its better at Sears or Target or the local hardware store?  When they
brag about the deal they got on the latest gadget, who do they think ‘pays’ for
that ‘deal’?   As it was for me, store level retail is a stopping point on the way
up. For others it’s a starter job or a stop gap job. Those that settle in at that
level are the same ones who would settle in anywhere.
  The amusing part about the people that disparage Wal-Mart is that most of
the people that they voice their disdain to are regular customers.
(One of these days I’m going to show up at my lefty friend’s house with one
of those huge pumpkin pies they sell at Wal-Mart and tell him it’s from a
new bakery called Wally’s on the Square) 
 
 
 An article by  Charles Platt in the New York Post puts to rest many of the
complaints against Wal-Mart. His column details his recent experience
as a Wal-Mart employee.
  One of the things that caught my eye was the autonomy that store
managers and department heads have in controlling inventory levels.
The reason this caught my eye is that I started my career as a Store
Manager for a clothing chain in southern California. 
  One of the trends at the time was the plan-o-gram. The bigger store
chains decided that if they could control and market the inventory from a
central location they could save money by both reducing the number and
pay of store level management.  The way this worked was a store got a
truck load of merchandise and a Plan-o-gram. It told the store exactly where
to locate the product and how to market it.  Every store was uniform.
  While this idea sounds good on paper, let’s look at a real life situation.
I worked for a small family owned chain of free standing clothing stores. 
The store I managed was located in San Bernardino. On the other extreme
was a store in Orange County (CA).  Now these are two entirely different
worlds and buying patterns differ greatly.  While the manager at Orange
County ordered lots of Jordache and Gloria Vanderbilt designer Jeans
(All the rage at the time), I ordered Levi’s.
The owner of the chain called plan-o-gram managers ‘glorified key carriers’.
 
  Wal-Mart started out as a Plan-o-gram operation. 
  At the beginning Wal-Mart built stores in mainly small town/rural areas that
had a big shopping draw and most importantly no KMart or any other
discounter.  From the beginning price was the drawing card.  Building on
the success of this venture Wal-Mart moved up to medium size cities,
filling voids that KMart and the others missed or neglected. 
Wal-Mart has now surpassed all of its competition. They did it by adjusting
to the realities of the marketplace. They rolled back their ‘Made in USA’
campaign when that became a financial burden and they adjusted their
Plan-o-gram thinking. It is not easy to steer a behemoth in any business
as bureaucracies get entrenched. Just ask KMart.
Retail success depends on flexibility; apparently Wal-Mart knows that well. 

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Our New Model Government

What do I think of the outcome of the National elections? 

That can be summed up by Lisa Simpson of The Simpson’s TV show.

Lisa and her friend created a mythical country called Equalia. Lisa said
to her friend, “In Equalia everyone will be equal except we will be in charge.”
Have you read Animal Farm  by George Orwell?
 

Context

One of the traits of the leftist liberal is to ignore context when bashing
the opposition. Case in point;  the recent column by Leonard Pitts,
a syndicated communist  (oops! that’s columnist). This week he addresses
a comment by Rush Limbaugh.  In speaking about the newly
inaugurated  President  Obama  Rush, in context, said, “I hope he fails”.

Here is the quote by Rush

“Everybody thinks it's outrageous to say.  Look, even my staff,
"Oh, you can't do that."  Why not?  Why is it any different, what's new,
what is unfair about my saying I hope liberalism fails?  Liberalism is
our problem.  Liberalism is what's gotten us dangerously close to the
precipice here.  Why do I want more of it?  I don't care what the Drive-By
story is.  I would be honored if the Drive-By Media headlined me all day
long: "Limbaugh: I Hope Obama Fails."  Somebody's gotta say it. “
Pitts uses only the “I hope he fails quote”. He doesn’t expand to the
reality that the quote is one of hoping that the liberal agenda fails. 
Pitts calls it, “a calculated outrage”.  He writes,
“The irony is that Limbaugh and the other clowns would have you believe
they are bedrock defenders of this country, that they love it more than the
rest of us, more than anything.

That's a lie. Limbaugh just told us so, emphatically.

It's not the country they love. It's the attention. The ideology, their
perversion of conservatism, is but a means toward that end…..
The country doesn't matter. The ''side'' does. And Limbaugh's side
seems angry in power and angry out. It's as if anger is all they really have.”

 Entire Column Here

EXCUSE ME?  Rush Limbaugh is a perversion of conservatism?

Which conservatism would that be.  Would it be the ‘conservatism’
of the suck-up RINO’s that populate the Republican Party and both
halls of congress.  Would it be the ‘conservatism’ of the old democrats
that abandoned ship for the Republican Party?
If Rush is a perversion of either of these type of ‘conservatives’
then call me perverted.

 

About that Fairness Doctrine

Writings by Joel McNally appear regularly in the local newspaper. 
On November 4th one of his ‘disinformation  columns' was about the
“fairness doctrine”.  Entire Column Here  A doctrine that purports
to demand balance in radio and TV broadcasting.  His target was AM
radio, stating that the ‘right wing’ has dominated this medium for
“2 decades” and “… resembles a government run media in some
totalitarian country…”
Let’s look at the facts. Radio stations are in the business of selling
advertising. In order to sell this advertising they need an audience.
AM radio was losing its audience when FM radios became the norm in
the 70’s. Music moved to FM and AM was relegated to local stations
and a few ‘top 40’ hold outs.  Talk radio evolved but it was mostly
self-help gurus and recipe shows. Then in 1987 the original Fairness
Doctrine was ended.  Shortly after Rush Limbaugh pioneered the
idea of political discourse presented in an entertaining manner. 
Howard Stearn introduced the idea of dialog between the producer
and the on air talent.  Suddenly Talk Radio was hot. 
For McNally to say that the ‘right’ has dominated talk Radio is incorrect. 
There are plenty of ‘left wing’ stations and programs. 
(WCPT in Chicago, Ill and WTDY in Madison, WI are just 2 examples
in my listening area).
McNally also contends that the air space is limited and should be regulated.
HELLO JOEL, its 2009! There is Internet Radio, Subscription Radio,
and Podcasts. I’m willing to bet there are plenty of AM radio bands
for sale.
Joel McNally is not in favor of fairness. He is in favor of stifling
political discourse. 

 (See my earlier post: A Fair for All and No Fair to Anybody

 

 

We have met the enemy…

By proclaiming that the war on terror does not really exist, the Obama

Administration has put their collective heads deep in the sand,
exposing their derrieres to a butt whipping.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/114385

 

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Running On Empty

 Alfred P. Sloan became the head of General Motors in the early 1920’s and
formed a corporate structure that would become the model of most corporations
well into the 70’s.  The Sloan structure served the business well in the 30’s and
with the switch to wartime production in the early 40’s. During wartime production
the factories were updated and modernized on the government’s dime. The
groundwork was laid for the post war boom.
What a boom it was. Millions of returning war veterans took advantage of the GI
bill and with new diplomas and new jobs they entered the market demanding housing,
cars, and appliances.
The demand for cars exceeded the supply. Detroit couldn’t pound out the cars fast
enough.
For 25 years the Auto industry manufactured a product that was both high
volume and high profit.  In the ‘real’ world of business you usually have one or
the other, seldom both. By the late 60’s the industry had become a bloated
beaurocratic version of Sloan’s corporate structure.  There was a certain
arrogance that permeated all the way down to the salesman on the car lot.
The emphasis was on style over substance.
The planned obsolescence concept of the 50’s led to yearly redesign of cars.
Introduction of the new model year was an annual social event.  Even with the flashy
new sheet metal, cars were built with engineering concepts from World War 2. 
Fit and finish had wide tolerances and plenty of adjustment room.  Suspension
technology was ‘bigger tires and longer wheelbase’ equaled a better ride. 
The emphasis of the 50’s and 60’s was to design and build bigger and more
powerful engines. The competition between companies made the American
Auto Industry experts at giving the people what they wanted. They knew the market;
they knew what would sell and what wouldn’t. For a long time the demand was for
more power and the  Corvette, Thunderbird, and the more affordable ‘pony cars’ and 
‘muscle cars’ of the 60’s was the culmination of the powerful car.

 

Lot’s of money and lots of customers, created optimism in the American Automobile
 Industry. This optimism allowed the unions to demand more wages, more benefits,
and more workers. The union strategy of targeting one of the big 3 automakers for a
strike caused the targeted auto maker to capitulate to union demands. The other 2
fell in line.
This would last forever, they surmised, and the new demands by the union
could be paid for with increased prices and sustainable demand.
In the mid 60’s Japanese car makers Toyota and Datsun introduced their cars to the
United States. They were small, underpowered, and ‘Japanese’.  (At that time
Japanese was equated with junk products). The
US auto makers had introduced
their version of small cars to compete with the popular Volkswagen Beetle. Chevy 2,
Ford Falcon, and Plymouth Valiant were built with the same technology as the
big cars, just on a smaller scale, much like the Volkswagen.

 

As the demand continued for the powerful big cars that made the Big 3 famous, a
market for small cars was developing.  People started looking for small new car
instead of a big used car as their ‘second car’.  A sizeable chunk of the
‘baby boomer’ generation favored a smaller car.  The Big 3 did not respond to
this market and had no inclination towards building small profit cars.
They already realized that their union contracts and legacy
* costs would
make lower priced cars unprofitable.
By 1973 Toyota, Datsun (which became Nissan),
Honda, and Mazda all had dealerships in the
US. They first covered a supply gap
for smaller cars then began to take market share from the Big 3. 
The bureaucratic structure in place made bringing new products to market a
long and arduous process for the US Automakers. 
In 1976 models were introduced to compete with the Japanese
imports. You might remember some of these technological disasters.
Ford Pinto and Mustang 2, Chevrolet Vega and Monza, AMC Gremlin and
Pacer,
Pontiac LeCar,  Plymouth Horizon, and the Dodge Omni.
They became known as ‘sh!t boxes’.

 

The writing was on the wall but the insular world of the US Auto Industry focused
on the profitable vehicles over the increasing demand for smaller cars.
The few insiders with a view toward market realities were pushed to the side.
Overall demand was leveling off because everyone already had a car or two and
was keeping them longer.
That dwindling demand would now be shared with imports.

 

The gas shortage of the late 70’s further increased demand for smaller fuel
efficient cars.  Front wheel drive technology was introduced by the Japanese.
The big 3 were now faced with marketing fuel efficient, front wheel drive cars. 
They were also faced with the fact that agreements with the unions demanded
a high profit. 
The government came to the rescue through the law of unintended consequences.
The crippling CAFÉ standards set by the Carter administration led to
underpowered cars. There was still a sizable segment of car buyers that preferred
big powerful American cars. They shunned the cars that complied with the fuel
mileage standards. They shunned the mid size cars with 2.5 liter, block 4 engines.
What did grab their attention were trucks. Exempted from the CAFÉ standards
they were big and powerful if a little cramped for passenger space. 
The US Automakers saw a reprieve in making ‘passenger trucks’.  They would
become known as SUV’s. They were roomy, powerful, high profit and in demand.
Happy days were here again!  Capitulation to the unions followed the old familiar pattern.
Small cars were improved and could hold their own against the Japanese (and Korean)
imports but they were still low profit.

 

This is the time the US Automakers should have realized that the fuel price crisis
of the late 70’s would reappear at some point. The work should have begun toward
creating a business plan that would make small cars profitable. This may have led
to some playing hardball with the unions, perhaps some strikes and animosity,
but in the end the automakers would be prepared for the next round of small car
mania.  It was also all too apparent that environmentalism was gaining political
power. More government regulation was sure to come. It would have been in
the automakers best interest to invest some of those SUV profits in the next
generation of technology, such as hybrids and alternate fuel technology.
(Beyond the token amount they did spend).
 
Having blown those opportunities, we are where we are today. The US Auto
industry once the pinnacle of corporate structure is now hat in hand sitting before
the US Congress.
Their demise seems inevitable not because of corporate
greed, as many would say, but because of a lack of vision, and a lack of
contingency planning.

 

Even as they appeal to Congress for a rescue loan, the auto industry has a
demand for their product. In 2007, General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler sold
8.5 million cars in the
United States.
Worldwide, GM alone sold 9.3 million cars.  Ford outsold both Honda and
Nissan in the
US.

 

US Automakers sell 57% of all cars sold in the US. Even in this down year
 of 2008 that will amount to 8.1 million cars.

 

So where is the future of the American Automobile?  Where there is a
vacuum there are investors to fill that vacuum.  While their may still be a
scaled back Ford, or GM, or Chrysler, there may also be the modern
day equivalents to the DeSotos, Packard’s, Studebakers, and Maxwell’s
of yesteryear.

 

*Legacy costs are pensions and benefits due to non productive employees agreed upon in former and present union contracts.

 

 

Supply and Demand

Combined U.S. market share for Big 3 estimated to be 57.3%

 

Number of cars sold in US, 2006   16.38M units

 9.3 million By US Automakers

 

Number of cars sold in US 2008 (projected)   14.1 million

 8.1 million By US Automakers

 

2008 World Wide Auto sales through August 2008 55 million)

 

Not factored in are other brands made in the United States and US
made cars that are exported.

 

Can imports make up the pending supply gap? 

There is not enough manufacturing capacity available elsewhere (see
World Wide demand above) nor enough shipping available to move the goods.

 

If the Big 3 fails to meet market demand, the cars to meet this demand
would logistically have to be built in the
United States.

 

Sources for sales figures: Detroit Free Press & Autodigest.com

 

 

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The Man Behind the Curtain

Barrack Obama is the President-Elect and not many know who he is. Time and again I
read that Obama is a mystery. There is no consensus on how he will govern.
So what are we in for?

 

The biggest clue would be to find out how Barrack Obama got to the place where he
could be elected as the President of the
United States.  He vaulted over the well
organized and powerful Clinton Machine within the Democrat Party and raised more
money than the well connected Hillary Clinton.  A lot was said about his acquaintances
during the campaign, Rev. Wright, Bill Ayers and Tony Rezko, but they do not have
the political power to place Obama on a Presidential ballot.
Who was the real power behind Barrack Obama?

 

As to how he will govern that can go one of 2 ways. Traditionally the Left tends
to come on strong with a lot of unpopular ideas and programs. This causes the
moderate members of congress to go into a defensive position to maintain their
own power and sometimes because of a public uproar.  Perhaps Obama has
learned the lessons of history and will move slowly, chipping away at his
socialist agenda a little at a time.  The pressure from the far left will be huge
as they demand instant results.  As one columnist so aptly put it, the
“Great Society” liberals are old and getting impatient.  The first month or so
of Obama’s reign will tell us the answer. It will be either socialism ‘in your face’
or socialism a ‘bite at a time’.  But socialism it will be.

 

I’m Just Sayin’

During the campaign two quotes by Obama bothered me. One was “my Muslim faith”.
How does that just slip out?  Have you ever heard anyone utter something about
their faith that was not in line with their ‘heart of hearts’?  The other was “57 states”.
While this was passed off as a tired campaigner making a math mistake, there are
Muslim implications in the term.

 

In California a 52.3 % of voters favored the Gay Marriage Amendment,
Proposition 8.
Thousands of protesters took to the streets. 
There are demands by many groups and individuals,
including Arnold Schwarzenegger, to take the issue to the California
Supreme Court.
Do these people not see the principle here? 
They want a court to overturn the will of the people.

Today it’s Proposition 8, tomorrow it’s ______(fill in the blank).

 

Arrest Them

The far left crowd has this hair brained idea of bringing President Bush before the
Haig for war crimes once he leaves office.  They also want to bring in Karl Rove and
Dick Cheney.
These lefties remind me of their political brethren in the French Revolution. When
the revolutionaries seized control of
France the trials and executions were seemingly
endless. It was called the Reign of Terror.  Today’s lefties like their trials and hearings.
Prepare for lots of them during the upcoming 111th Congress. 
Perhaps it will be known as the Reign of the Moonbats.
 
From the Ann Coulter thread today:
Hal Donahue
Location: PA
Reply # 165
Date:
 Nov 13, 2008 - 8:58 AM EST
Subject: GunnyG©
"Date: Nov 13, 2008 - 8:42 AM EST Subject: Hal ...WTF are you gonna do when Bush is gone?"

Work to get him into the hague for crimes against humanity. I told you that before
link

 

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How the GOP Got it’s Groove Back

Things looked bleak for the conservatives in the Republican Party, (and those of us

with one foot out the door), until a miracle out of nowhere. John McCain, the ‘maverick’

that had let down the conservatives so many times, came through with a real true

conservative as his running mate. John McCain announced that Sarah Palin would be

his running mate in the upcoming Presidential election. The media firestorm was

instant, the attacks from the left vicious. Proof positive that a conservative had entered

the arena.

Some thoughts on Sarah Palin
The left seemed to think that attacking the 17 year old daughter was somehow a

legitimate course of action. The mean old conservatives were to vote this girl off the

island for getting pregnant. “Isn’t that what you conservatives do” posed a lefty on

the town hall threads. Going after the children of any candidate is despicable,

but hey, ‘the end justifies the means’ in their playbook.

After Sarah Palin’s rousing convention speech the pundits started with, “…but she

didn’t write her own speech.” Excuse me, but isn’t an item on many political operative’s

resumes ‘Speech Writer'for the so and so campaign’?

Helloooo, writing your own speech when running for major public office? How 1800’s.
Brit Hume slammed Mort Kondracki (FOX NEWS) for bringing this up in the post

game show following Palin’s speech Wednesday night.

Sarah Palin was effective in so many ways. Her speech pattern and accent spoke

to the millions of us middle Americans who see more people speak like her than

speak like Joe Biden.

Did her speech, replete with quotable zingers, remind you of Ronald Reagan?
Stand Back, Sarah Palin is a Mom on a mission.

 

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Nothing New on the Left

No surprises at the Democratic convention. A well executed exercise
in presenting the same old liberal dogma that we have heard in conventions
past.
Some impressions;
I watched the coverage on MSNBC briefly on Tuesday afternoon and noticed
that each speaker was framed by signs outside the news booth windows that
said “Impeach Bush”.
Bill and Hillary cemented their place in the party and will now fade away until
2010 and 2012.
When was the last time that Joe Biden had an original thought?
I didn’t know I was so bad off until Obama informed me on Thursday night
that I am broke, oppressed, depressed, and without hope.
I recovered by Friday morning.
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McCain Hits One Out of the Park

The choice of Sarah Palin as his VP is better than any of us conservatives had
hoped or dreamed. There is hope for conservatism within the Republican party.
On my drive home Friday (29th) I listened to the lefty/Air America station
(WCPT 820 AM, Chicago) to get their take on the Palin nomination. They were
 ‘squealing like stuck pigs’. I don’t recall what host was on but he and some lefty
author guest jumped on the experience issue. The guest said that by the convention
next week John McCain will realize his mistake and force Sarah Palin off the ticket.
I knew for sure that McCain had made the right choice.
About that experience issue. Barack Obama, top of the ticket, 2 years in the Senate.
Sarah Palin, second on the ticket, 2 years as Governor of a state. How can this be a
winning issue for the Democrats?
The Republican Convention is next week in St. Paul Minnesota will be a more positive
and uplifting production than the gloom and doom dems. The most interesting aspect
will be the media coverage. Watch how the MSM commentators will tell the Republicans
what they should do or should have done.

After that, a 60 day sprint to Election Day.
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Prepare for Fun

 
The Democrat National Convention is next week. It will be a well scripted coronation
of Barack Obama as the standard bearer of the Democrats in the upcoming election.
But Wait.... The Clintons have 2 nights to rile up the crowd. Hillary's delegates get to
vote. Could there be drama?
There are some lingering questions, Is there a Michelle Obama 'whitey' tape? Is there
an issue with Obama's birth certificate? Is there an August surprise?  Probably not,
but then, these are the Democrats.
 
But that is not where the fun is.
It's outside. There will be the usual cast of zanies. Code Pink, gay groups, angry
feminists. Idealistic zealots all. They will put on a show. (The media will even act
like they are normal people).
 
Now, if there is any shenanigans inside the convention hall, that will manifest itself
outside in the form of loud and angry protests.
Then it will really be fun.
 
Wisconsin Guys
There is a style of humor in the upper midwest that revolves around sight gags
and plays on words. ("Nice beaver."  "Thanks, I just had it stuffed."  If you are
smiling now, you have seen the movie. If not you are going, like whaaat?)
 
The Zucker brothers capture this type of humor in their films, especially
'Top Secret'. They are most famous for the movies 'Airplane' ,a spoof of the
ubiquitous Airport series, and the 'Naked Gun'.
 
One of the brothers, David Zucker, produced a movie to be released
in early October. It is a spoof of Michael Moore.
'An American Carol' is destined to be a Conservative Comedy Classic.
see more here.
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The Conservative

   There is a theory being postulated by many conservatives that it would be good for
Barack Obama to win the 2008 election. The theory is that the public will be so
disillusioned by an Obama administration that they will flock toward conservatism.
The theory further postulates that a message would be sent to the Republican Party
that will steer them back to their conservative roots.
   Those conservative roots are pretty shallow.
   From Calvin Coolidge to Ronald Reagan was a long time in the wilderness for the
conservatives in the Republican Party.  Herbert Hoover was a moderate but the stain
of the depression was blamed on him and by extension the conservatives. When the
Republicans once again gained the presidency it was with a string of moderates,
Eisenhower, Nixon, and Ford.  The discrediting of Senator Joe McCarthy further eroded
the ‘conservative’ brand.
   Positive results for conservatives happened at the State level. Most states had
conservative leaning Governors and many conservative majorities in state legislators.
At the national level the liberals worked at eroding states rights, a cornerstone of conservatism.
The conservatives found their voice in the presidential arena in 1964 by securing the
nomination for Barry Goldwater.  It was just a bone however because the Democrats
had 1964 in their pocket behind the legacy of John F. Kennedy.
   After1964 the conservative movement was championed by Ronald Reagan. For 14 years
he organized, campaigned and spoke before every group that would listen.  The Ronald Reagan
win in 1980 was not a result of a sudden groundswell movement, but the result of years of hard
work. To get elected Ronald Reagan attracted millions of democrats to the Republican ranks.
The old middle left democrats were disenchanted with the leftward swing of the Democrat party and
the disaster that was the Carter Presidency.  We look back at the Reagan Years as the high
point of conservatism, and it was. However Reagan had to make many compromises to get a few
things done, even within the party. 
   The groundwork for the moderates to control the Republican Party after Reagan was laid when
George H. W. Bush was ‘chosen’ to be Reagan’s running mate.  From the 80’s to now those
‘Reagan Democrats’, now known as neocons, have had a major voice in the party. Today the
neocons and the traditional middle right, ‘go along to get along’, moderates rule the Republican Party
at the national level. 
The theory that an Obama presidency will teach the conservatives a lesson neglects the fact
that, at the national level, there is no one to teach.
The future of conservatism lies in the grass roots. Conservatism needs to work on the Senate,
Congress, Governorships, and State Legislators.  Leaders must be groomed and take the fight
to the public the old fashioned way.
The way Reagan did.
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Let Them Eat Cake

Just before the French revolution, the historical birth of socialism,
there was a shortage of wheat. This resulted in a bread shortage.
The rulers of France had a law in place that the expensive sweet
pastries must be sold at the same price as the cheaper common bread.
Since the law would result in bakers losing money on the sweet breads,
no sweet breads would have been produced at all.  The law was not
enforced.  
Upon hearing that the populace was paying high prices for the
small amount of wheat available, the response was “let them eat cake”.
Link . The quote became famous because it pointed out the disconnect
between France’s then ruling elite and the populace. They were
subsequently overthrown and socialism was born.
 It is the socialists that are now the elite. They know what’s good for us,
 just listen to them.
In the year 2008 there is a gasoline shortage. The populace is
paying high prices for the gasoline that is available. As the
democrats in congress stall any relief that will result in increasing
the supply, the populace is calling for drilling our own oil.  So what
would be the democrat response?  “Drive small cars and wait for the wind.” 
Link 1    Link 2
In 1790’s France,  Marie Antoinette was executed for treason by the
revolutionaries.  The ‘let them eat cake’ attitude was often attributed to her
.
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