I may be biased, but the Big Three didn't have a plan to pay the government 8% on their money like the banks did.
You may be biased? Well what exactly is it going to take for you to get soundly on the biased bandwagon???? Considering where you work, it's my opinion you should get biased real quick and propa' like!
They just showed up in 3 Gulfstreams, sat there with blank faces when grilled by some clowns in congress, and eventually threw flight departments (and countless others really) under the bus. It showed the utter lack of leadership in the automakers, and it has quickly become corporate aviations worse day in history.
I'd like to thank these CEOs for that stellar performance.
I think talking about a lack of leadership may not be the best road to go down. What about Sandy? Sec. Rubin? Would you call them allowing Citi to get so tied up into the sub-prime market leadership? Afterall, it's what's going to potentially bring their company down. Sandy got the boot, I know, but where is your outrage there? Bob Rubin presided over the United States' longest period of sustained economic growth, so he knows what he is doing. It happened on his watch, so allowing this to happen to such a large company with so much on the line is sh!t that I'm paying for at this point. I know he was not the CEO, but look, like Colin Powell, if you don't like what's going on and you know it's wrong, resign, and Rubin didn't do that. Leadership, no, not all all. Pure Greed? You bet. And Citi is not alone in this, all the large banks did it, well, except for Bank of America. Their CEO was smart enough to stay away from it and fired several people for insisting BOA was missing out on a "niche" in the market. Trying to make money off of people who don't pay their bills in the 1st place is high risk, and failure is what these banks deserve for being so greedy; but you see, we can't let them fail because of the collateral damage that would cause. Their too big to fail, and that is the whole problem here.
The Big three have been broken for a long time, they also don't have trillions in assets like the banks. MANY banks have already been allowed to completely fail or forced into mergers by the Fed. I think much of the concern is what does Detroit have for a plan and why isn't Chpt 11 and restructuring an option?
You are right, 100%. The big 3 has been broken for quite some time. Arrogance. They "know" that car buyers want, so they don't need the input of people who actually buy the cars. That type of input is stuff only the Japs need.
Here is where you and I are going to start to differ; while the banks do have trillions in assets, the automakers do as well. Their workers. Let the Big 3 go out of business and when the unemployment lines overflow, you'll find out exactly what trillions in assets looks like. It'll cost us all. This bailout will look like a drop in the bucket compared to the economic impact failure of the 3 will bring with it. What is the plan of the Big 3 you ask? I'll ask what is Citi's plan? I've heard nothing. You see, the white collars didn't have to go before Congress and explain that. AIG and Citi have not had to disclose what their plan is to the Lawmakers. The trillions that the banks have in assets, well, this whole ordeal lets you know the banks need to be spilt up. They are too big to fail. They had trillions in assets, and they fukced that up. They don't deserve to be so big; they were too irresponsible (greedy) with the assets they did have. They pissed off the chance to be trusted with so much. I suspect Obama's administration will fix all of that.
As for Chapter 11/restructuring, you must be kidding. Chapter 11 would give them the right to no longer honor their contracts, including Warranties. A recent survey taken confirmed 80% of car buyers would not buy cars from a company in Bankruptcy. You wouln't either, nor would I. We'd be fools to do it. Fools. I can remember people saying the airlines would NEVER take the pensions of retired pilots. never say never Mr. UAL/DAL. Warranties would eventually be worthless and we both know that.
None of this is good for corporate aviation..I agree, the media has no clue...but the 2 (banks and auto makers) are not even remotely similar - as battered as both are right now.
Agreed, but while the industries are different, the solutions to helping them out of their current situations are very similar. If you take a shower before work, you're already well on your way to getting the help you need. If you have to take a shower when you get home from work, you're still waiting to hear if you are going to get a bailout.
So what are these 2 and likely other companies going to do? close departments, spend MORE money chartering or fractional, lay off more pilots, then eventually rebuild a department later on when public outcry ceases? - in the mean time many of us in aviation may likely just take it in the a$$....
Go ahead and bend all the way over so they can jam it all the way up there. Good luck to you out there as I suspect you're going to need it when some dipsh!t reporter gets bored enough and does a little digging.
Finally, I think I met you out in Driggs, ID back in '02. You dropped off Sec. Rubin who was going "fly fishing" with my boss at the time. The other pilot I was with didn't know who he was, so I had him pull out a $20, and told him the guy's signature down there is the guy he was shaking hands with 3 minutes ago. He was pretty impressed at that point.
Seriously, hope this all pans out well for you.