Is this a new thing?I remember a few years ago them giving MoveOn a hard time for wanting to run a political ad.But they have the Chrysler ad this year, and that racist anti-asian one too.... what changed?
2/7/2012 12:14:34 AM
Tebow had his anti-abortion thing last year, too.
2/7/2012 12:21:06 AM
tebow is funny.killing unborn babies is terrible. lopping off their foreskin is a-okay though.
2/7/2012 1:16:36 AM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clint_Eastwood
2/7/2012 2:53:23 AM
Which one was the anti-asian ad?
2/7/2012 10:02:16 AM
was it the one where they were trying to drive?
2/7/2012 10:09:17 AM
^^ http://youtu.be/TkQAalcsg5E
2/7/2012 12:18:21 PM
I don't get what was so political about the Chrysler ad. The auto bailout worked for them, is that something controversial to state in public?Was there anyone on the right who thought so aside from Karl Rove?[Edited on February 7, 2012 at 12:29 PM. Reason : .]
2/7/2012 12:26:32 PM
^^ holy shit i missed that ad.. One comment on the video: this is about as racist as showing blacks lining up at a welfare office.[Edited on February 7, 2012 at 12:35 PM. Reason : some of the video comments are pretty funny.]
2/7/2012 12:33:40 PM
2/7/2012 1:06:59 PM
If you're going to fearmonger about the "yellow menace" at our doorstep, at least do it properly.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYKAbRK_wKASee, no racism. Just Chinese people twenty years from now laughing at the destruction of the United States of America.
2/7/2012 1:34:17 PM
There's nothing wrong with the Chrysler ad. It's not political except to people with a stick up their ass.
2/7/2012 2:45:42 PM
Had this been a Ford ad, the right would be lauding it as the trumpet to usher in Jesus' second coming...
2/7/2012 2:53:29 PM
2/7/2012 3:13:03 PM
The Chrysler ad was not political. Get off it.
2/7/2012 8:27:52 PM
I found it amusing to learn that none of the "halftime in america" ad was actually shot in detroit.
2/7/2012 8:30:39 PM
I read that they actually used shots of the Wisconsin protests only with the signs and stuff blurred out. So I guess it was a little political.
2/7/2012 9:13:36 PM
it wasnt political, it was "please dont hate us cause our terrible company got bailed out."
2/8/2012 10:54:26 AM
And how is that not political?"We used our political influence to avoid bankruptcy, something that regular people/businesses just have to deal with. Suck it bitches!"
2/8/2012 10:58:08 AM
"Regular people" pay their bills by having jobs at auto plants and also avoided bankruptcy thanks to the bailout. You can be anti-bailouts-in-general all you want, but you can't pretend that the bailout under Bush and restructuring under Obama were simple political favors for Chrysler execs. There were very clear incentives to avoid the broad (read: Regular People) consequences of the US auto industry bottoming out completely.[Edited on February 8, 2012 at 12:36 PM. Reason : .]
2/8/2012 12:28:41 PM
A tiny percentage did. The rest of the population paid for it.
2/8/2012 12:33:14 PM
They repaid all but 1.6 billion, divided amongst the 150k or so Americans who pay taxes, that's about $10 a person. That's a pretty good price to pay for saving the domestic auto industry which is one of the few remaining manufacturing sectors in the US. Subtract from that the taxes that the (not bankrupt) Chrysler paid last year (about 150 million), and Americans can say they saved 50 thousand jobs for the price of a lunch with a coke. That's not counting all the jobs created by those employees spending their paychecks, or the jobs created at the companies that supply and distribute for Chrysler's operations.[Edited on February 8, 2012 at 12:42 PM. Reason : .]
2/8/2012 12:38:24 PM
2/8/2012 12:42:48 PM
That sounds like a terrible deal. 10 dollars is taken from me by force so people can keep making ugly, unreliable cars? How about nothing is taken from me and their assets are liquidated in bankruptcy proceedings?Your half-baked justifications for the auto bailouts could be applied to any failing enterprise. By your logic, if we don't bailout every company considering bankruptcy, the jobs and factories will disappear and never come back.Maybe the factories would have been taken over by, I don't know, Honda. Then American workers could be producing cars that are worth a shit, unlike these abominations:[Edited on February 8, 2012 at 12:57 PM. Reason : ]
2/8/2012 12:48:37 PM
2/8/2012 1:11:31 PM
2/8/2012 1:28:05 PM
2/8/2012 1:36:24 PM
^I'm not disagreeing with you, but rather just thought I'd point out a few things. Foreign automobile companies are still interesting in increasing their manufacturing capacity in North America (and the US) either through plant expansion or with new plants.As to old plants, the old joint venture plant (NUMMI) that Toyota and GM had is now a Tesla factory and an old GM plant in Delaware is now owned by Fisker, who intends (as I don't believe anything has been sold yet) to build luxury plugin hybrids and ZEVs. So it would seem that at least some people are interested in these old plants.
2/8/2012 1:43:08 PM
2/8/2012 1:47:54 PM
2/8/2012 1:48:47 PM
agreedand neither of those companies has been yet to prove it can stand on it's own feet without government money.
2/8/2012 2:10:34 PM
2/8/2012 2:20:02 PM
lol
2/8/2012 2:21:28 PM