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  • GM: More Bailout-Worthy than Citigroup [View article]
    Oh My Goodness!! If they DID NOT need it then why take it and why not give it all back immediately. Oh, I forgot, they are using taxpayer's money to buy little banks in Foreign Countries

    Interesting comments about GM, If their vehicles cost to much,how were they able to sell 9.7 million units in 2007( more then Toyota and Honda combined). You must be another one of cronies that is Bought out by Big Oil. At $1.70 a gallon, how many people are going to buy little Prius hybrids now??? Ill answer that, now that BIG OIL broke the back of this country at $5.00 a gallon gas (monopoly,price-fixing < that's a real free market)(Last time I checked Monopoly's and Price -Fixing were illegal) No one will buy any car because we will all be laid off. Wonderful Job Big Oil and all you crooked politicians.

    Why are the Big -Three automakers so afraid to expose the Big Oil folly's???


    On Dec 05 03:44 PM User 313790 wrote:

    > Having the ability to get inside info on Citi, I can tell you that
    > they did not need the bailout. They accepted it to stabalize the
    > mass frenzy of investors driving down the stock. With regards to
    > automakers they have lobbied congress away from tougher gas standards
    > and have actually killed many of the proposals to switch their business
    > models. As more and more dollars got built into the price of a car
    > via unions what do you think the American people chose to do? Although
    > fear and uncertainty is currently present in todays markets, the
    > media continues to drive it home daily. This constant reminder that
    > our indicators are "off" pushes people into panic mode. I am a firm
    > believer in the free market system and I understand that every 7-10
    > years something in our system needs to correct itself. It has to
    > fail in order to get better. Congress this time around, pushed hard
    > to lower lending criteria and "we" responded, even if we were not
    > able to afford it. Personally, when I invest my money, I read everything.
    > Maybe that is a lesson that should be learned by the consumer who
    > rode the false waves of funny money. I did learn that oversight
    > to some extent needs to be present. Something that was lacking in
    > this mess, but something that should be learned next time around.
    > To close, I believe that no bailout of anything should ever be inserted
    > into a free market supply/demand model. You taint the very thing
    > that creates the wealth in this country
    Dec 06 23:10 pm |Rating: +1 0
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