Diamondpilot
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2007
- Messages
- 16,316
- Location
- Daleville, IN
- Tractor
- Jinma 254/284 Ford 861 Powermaster at work
Going by your links Ford got a loan under a DOE program, which several other auto companies got including GM and Toyota. I already knew about this, the program was started before the bailouts. That isn't a bailout, as I said before if it was loans to GM, no one would care. Ford didn't walk away from it's debt, GM did. That is the part that has many people including myself upset at GM. GM was treated different than any company in the history of our country. They were allowed to walk away with very little in terms of sacrifice. The people who made the sacrifice were the stock holders and the people who held GM's bonds and of course the US tax payer.
As I said before GM should have been auctioned off and the bond holders at least should have been covered. Instead the government did something it has never done before.
Now we want to change the meaning of bailout, or to lump loans into bailout? Kinda like "It depends on what the meaning of the words 'is' is".
Well said. Glad someone else can see the light. :thumbsup:
I really could care less what someone buys or if I change anyone's mind but me and my family have studied this thoroughly and would feel the same way about Ford or any other company if it happened differently. My BIL was a life long GM man, not anymore. I never really cared for GM trucks but did own a few but had really overall good service out of GM cars. Not great but acceptable but I will not touch one again.
GM is not done with its troubles. The bailout was just a band-aid to stop the bleeding.
I really do hope they make it. Chrysler/Dodge is not on the same level as GM and Ford when it comes to volume. Without GM strong Ford will be allowed to slip. Competition is good. I just wish there was some more in the form of Toyota, Nissan, and who ever else wanted to jump in the Diesel 3/4 ton market and up.
Chris