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OPINION

Cal Thomas: Thanks, Big Three, for the ride. It's time to say 'bye.

Friday, February 20, 2009
(Updated 3:00 am)

General Motors made my first car. It was a 1955 two-tone Chevrolet with stick shift and black tires. It had an AM radio and air conditioning, if I hand-cranked the window down in summer. It came with bench seats, the better to have your date close to you. I bought it used (this was before cars were "pre-owned") in 1961. My Dad co-signed the $750 note, which I paid.

Those were the days when you could fill up for pocket change. Somewhere I have old Esso receipts that show a full tank of regular gas cost me $3.

Chevrolet, Buick, Pontiac and Cadillac were the mainstays of GM, as Fairlane, Crestline Skyliner, Falcon and later Galaxie were for Ford, some of which I would own as an adult. I would also own some Chrysler products, so I have contributed to the profits of all the "Big Three."

Ford is fending for itself without a bailout from Washington, but GM and Chrysler have filed their restructuring proposals with the government in order to receive additional billions to keep them solvent. On Tuesday, GM received the final $4 billion on a $13.4 billion federal commitment. Chrysler, also getting $4 billion, has already requested an additional $3 billion. The money is conditioned on GM and Chrysler coming up with comprehensive restructuring plans that will prove to the government that they have made "aggressive" progress since they pleaded with lawmakers last December for financial aid. Members of Congress told the company CEOs that everyone had to make sacrifices, including management, unions, suppliers, investors and bondholders.

Here's a better idea: Let them die a slow death, with the emphasis on slow. Tell workers (management always seems to land on its feet) that they have a fixed amount of time to look for new jobs. Government will help them with training and education, but government cannot prop up companies that no longer make products people want to buy in large enough numbers for them to remain profitable.

There are many reasons the car companies are in trouble, all of which have been reported in the major media, but that is the past and it is way too late in the game to do much about guaranteed pensions and health care that ended up crippling GM, even after the company successfully negotiated with UAW members to decrease retirement benefits, which, honestly, is a little like quitting smoking after being diagnosed with lung cancer.

Some of the cars of my childhood are no more. Kaiser-Frazier was the biggest postwar challenger to the Big Three. Models included the 1949 Kaiser Custom Vagabond, the 1948 Frazier Manhattan four-door sedan, the Dragon sedans and Henry J coupes. In 1970, Kaiser, then known as the Kaiser Jeep Corp., was sold to American Motors Corp.

Other auto companies either went out of business or were bought. These included Packard ("ask the man who owns one"), Studebaker ("first by far with a postwar car"), and Hudson, which began making cars in 1909 and, like other automobile companies, in early 1942 was ordered by the U.S. government to stop making passenger cars and concentrate exclusively on fulfilling war contracts. In 1954, Hudson eventually merged with Nash-Kelvinator to become American Motors, a company that lasted in one form or another until 1987 when Chrysler gobbled it up.

None of these companies received government bailouts. If they couldn't sell their products at a profit, they either sold out, or went bust. People who worked for them found other jobs. No one starved to death.

Americans have benefited from capitalism. Our government should not be undermining an economic system that has produced more prosperity for its citizens than any nation on earth. It cannot forever prop up companies that make products not enough people wish to buy.

Cal Thomas is a syndicated columnist. E-mail: tmseditors@tribune.com.

Comments

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whoknows

February 20, 2009 - 11:04 am EST

Mr.Thomas,
I greatly appreciate your wish for thousands upon thousands of people to lose there job. While you sit behind your computer making more money than you probably deserve, me and many other people are coming to work everyday wondering when the axe is coming down. "Journalist" like yourself have bashed american made cars and most everything else for so long that no one wants to by it. When was the last time you drove any of the new vehicles made by GM? When was the last time you took time to see that GM alone has more cars that get over 30mpg than honda or toyota? When was the last time you went to "work" not knowing if by the end of the day you would still have a job? The collapse of the big three would be much more devistating to the economy than in it was in the past. More and more people are some how, either directly or indirectly, dependent on the business than they were in the past. It is ok to give the guys on wallstreet bailout money, which because of them is a big part of the reason the car business is suffering. People cant get loans, we cant sell cars, people hear about what happened on wall street and they dont spend, which again hurts car sales. So Mr.Thomas thank you for caring about what happens to thousands of americans. Please just sit there behind your computer and count your money while I try and smile in front of my 2 year old daughter while I worry if next week I can feed her.

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