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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: Cal Thomas: Unions, overregulation drove American Dream into a ditch
Source: SacBee
URL Source: http://www.sacbee.com/opinion/story/1920481.html
Published: Jun 5, 2009
Author: Cal Thomas
Post Date: 2009-06-05 16:06:01 by farmfriend
Keywords: None
Views: 1584
Comments: 137

Cal Thomas: Unions, overregulation drove American Dream into a ditch

By Cal Thomas
Published: Friday, Jun. 5, 2009 - 12:00 am | Page 19A

See the USA in your Chevrolet

America is asking you to call.

Drive your Chevrolet through the USA

America's the greatest land of all.

Fifty years ago, those words set to music each week on NBC's "The Dinah Shore Show" reflected an America and an automobile industry that is no more. That time and that industry were laid to rest this week when General Motors filed for bankruptcy and the government effectively nationalized GM and Chrysler after wasting billions of our tax dollars on a failed bailout.

Despite disclaimers from President Barack Obama that the government doesn't want to be in the car business, it is hard to see what it has bought with our tax dollars other than two of what used to be known as "the big three."

Government by default or determination will choose the types of cars the companies it owns will make. Government will buy a lot of them because not enough customers will unless they are made offers they can't refuse, not by a car salesman in a loud sport coat, but by a government bureaucrat in a suit.

It's difficult to let go of an American dream. When I was growing up, every kid wanted to drive his own car. Our frugal parents (who had just one car) would let us drive it, but with restrictions, including a set time to bring the car back in the same pristine condition in which we found it.

A car was a rite of passage. It conveyed independence and status.

Each September we salivated at the prospect of new models. There was always a big buildup and we'd go to the Chevy (or Ford) dealer early on the morning they were for sale. Sometimes they would be covered with sheets and a dramatic unveiling would take place. TV commercials would show parts of new models in a kind of striptease before their debut.

Some believe the models between 1955 and 1959, especially the 1957 Chevy Bel Air and the 1958 Impala, are unsurpassed, though Ford devotees have their Mustangs and T-Birds. Pontiac's GTO and some Dodge and Plymouth models were also great.

Chrysler had the Imperial, which resembled a boat with running lights, and the New Yorker for "old rich people." And then there was the one beyond our reach, but not beyond our dreams: the Cadillac. The song "Pink Cadillac" became a hit, in part because we saw Elvis in one.

America's relationship with its cars has rightly been called a love affair. Though some have tried to replicate the smell of a new car in spray cans, there is nothing quite like the feeling of sinking into new faux leather and later, if you could afford it, the real thing.

Much if not all of those thrills will be gone, thanks to greed by the unions, government overregulation and bad management. The customers, who once were always right, have been cheated.

All one has to do is look at government-made cars to see they are about as attractive as government art, government architecture, or many other things government does poorly. The Skoda (when the Czechoslovakia communist party made them – they're nice now thanks to free-market capitalism) had its own jokes: "How much is a Skoda worth with a full tank of gas?" Answer: "Twice as much."

East Germany's Trabant, a major polluter, was little more than a two-cycle engine encased in the thinnest veneer, and the old Soviet Union cars were about as appealing as a Siberian winter. These are the kinds of cars governments have produced.

Obama says all of those laid-off autoworkers will have to "sacrifice" for the sake of their children and grandchildren. So much for their American Dream. If a Republican president had said that, he would have been denounced as insensitive and uncaring.

On a highway, or a road along the levee

Performance is sweeter

Nothing can beat her

Life is completer in a Chevy.

Not anymore.

Bye-bye Miss American Pie;

drove my Chevy to the levee but the levee was dry.

This is the day GM died.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 49.

#2. To: farmfriend (#0)

Unions,

Cal was not around when ...Henry Ford...had men shot for wanting a piece of the dream.

By the way Cal, Ford like the Rockefellers et al, left BILLIONS behind to try and engineer a better society.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-06-05   16:56:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Cynicom (#2)

Why the hell is it always the unions fault and never management?

Lady X  posted on  2009-06-05   17:16:06 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Lady X (#3)

Why the hell is it always the unions fault and never management?

Ever try and get a teacher or a cop fired? The unions defend the indefensible.

mirage  posted on  2009-06-05   20:31:47 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: mirage (#9)

Without unions, good or bad, there would never have been a middle class in America.

True, unions protect the malingerers as well as the hard working employee.

What is the alternative??? We would go back to child labor, and many of the elite of this country are well know for having made their fortunes from the backs of children.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-06-05   20:42:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Cynicom (#10)

True, unions protect the malingerers as well as the hard working employee.

Like child molesters and embezzlers. They have long outlived most of their usefulness.

True, they are needed in some professions like mining and blasting where there is serious chance of injury, but most union members are Government employees these days.

So tell me, with the vast majority (read: 90%+) of union members being Government employees, are they truly still needed to protect the IRS agent who just stole your house, the cop who planted a bag of weed on your child, and the teacher who was caught sleeping with your son?

mirage  posted on  2009-06-05   22:28:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: mirage (#23)

So tell me, with the vast majority (read: 90%+) of union members being Government employees, are they truly still needed to protect the IRS agent who just stole your house, the cop who planted a bag of weed on your child, and the teacher who was caught sleeping with your son?

Having once been a Union member and employed by the government, I have a little knowledge on that subject.

In the olde days we had no union, needed none and then after 1960 there abouts, things changed, the government was setting all the rules and we had no recourse.

It was for self protection that Unions came about.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-06-05   22:37:55 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: Cynicom, mirage (#25)

things changed, the government was setting all the rules and we had no recourse.

Except the freedom to find a different job if you didn't like the one you had.

farmfriend  posted on  2009-06-05   22:58:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#39. To: farmfriend (#28)

Except the freedom to find a different job if you didn't like the one you had.

True...

With that view, you surprise me.

It is not a knowledgeable, self disciplined, well thought out position to abide.

Public servants are just that, working at the will and whim of politicians and their minions. Long ago it was called the "spoils system", a system kept afloat by widespread corruption that used public money as their own private piggy bank.

The people demanded change and a promise was made to civil servants, work for so many years and certain age, and you will receive a pension, in return we demand loyalty, we set your wages and working criteria. That left open the opportunity for mischief, in that one could work to near pension time and end up with nothing.

Thus Unions.

Cynicom  posted on  2009-06-06   3:00:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#42. To: Cynicom, farmfriend (#39)

We've seen the concept of "working for a living" (you know, for sustenance and prosperity throughout one's life) turned to dust. I've heard so-called "conservatives" lambasting workers who demand a decent retirement pension. If we respect the value of life and property, then we must be willing to compensate people for the portion of their lives they give up in work. To do otherwise is theft. And that's what we see now creeping upward from the poorer classes (who are often the ones to experience it) to the middle class.

Deasy  posted on  2009-06-06   11:17:39 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#47. To: Deasy, Cynicom (#42)

I've heard so-called "conservatives" lambasting workers who demand a decent retirement pension.

"so called" conservatives? Why is a company required to give you a retirement system? Isn't that your own responsibility? Isn't that what 401Ks are for? Now if a company adds money into a retirement system as part of your wage package fine but to see this as something you are "owed" is ridiculous. Worse if we are talking about government. If a company can't get decent workers at the wage they are offering they will raise the pay. To force this with a union is wrong and to then close it to workers who don't want to join the unions compounds the wrong.

farmfriend  posted on  2009-06-06   12:14:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#49. To: farmfriend (#47)

Why is a company required to give you a retirement system?

I didn't offer any details as to how workers should be supported after retirement. It doesn't really matter how it works to me. What's obvious is that more and more people are going into retirement in poverty, and more and more organizations are actively searching for ways they can avoid the problem. It's really just a symptom of a larger issue. We don't hear any real solutions from the left or the right about it, because they have a vested interest in keeping people divided and their attention off the real sources of our problems.

Deasy  posted on  2009-06-06   12:20:36 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 49.

#50. To: Deasy (#49)

What's obvious is that more and more people are going into retirement in poverty,

That will be me.

farmfriend  posted on  2009-06-06 12:43:38 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 49.

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