- Admin
- #1
So I'm really curious what everyone thinks about this. I have my opinion, but I'll wait to post it until there have been other responses:
------------------------------------------------------------
Was taxpayer-owned GM right to give away a Corvette to a Detroit pitcher?
USA Today
Jun 05, 2010
Now that General Motors is taxpayer owned, does it really make sense for it to be giving away free Chevrolet Corvettes to rich and happy, albeit disappointed, professional baseball players?
It's an interesting question that was raised by Nick Bunkley, writing in the New York Times.
As Drive On reported Thursday, the Detroit Tigers gave a Corvette -- base price $75,505 for the Z06 version -- to pitcher Armado Galarraga after an umpire's bad call cost him a perfect game. Millions of Americans have lost of their jobs in the past couple years, faced illnesses without health insurance, had their homes foreclosed, and no one gave them a free sports car.
Before 2009, no one would have batted an eye at GM giving a free car to ball player. But the automaker's bankruptcy last year left it about 60% owned by the federal government -- you and me.
"A free sports car for a Detroit Tigers baseball player was not among the reasons the government saved General Motors from financial collapse," Bunkley writes. The view is shared:
Full Story: Was taxpayer-owned GM right to give away a Corvette to a Detroit pitcher? - Drive On: A conversation about the cars and trucks we drive - USATODAY.com
------------------------------------------------------------
Was taxpayer-owned GM right to give away a Corvette to a Detroit pitcher?
USA Today
Jun 05, 2010
Now that General Motors is taxpayer owned, does it really make sense for it to be giving away free Chevrolet Corvettes to rich and happy, albeit disappointed, professional baseball players?
It's an interesting question that was raised by Nick Bunkley, writing in the New York Times.
As Drive On reported Thursday, the Detroit Tigers gave a Corvette -- base price $75,505 for the Z06 version -- to pitcher Armado Galarraga after an umpire's bad call cost him a perfect game. Millions of Americans have lost of their jobs in the past couple years, faced illnesses without health insurance, had their homes foreclosed, and no one gave them a free sports car.
Before 2009, no one would have batted an eye at GM giving a free car to ball player. But the automaker's bankruptcy last year left it about 60% owned by the federal government -- you and me.
"A free sports car for a Detroit Tigers baseball player was not among the reasons the government saved General Motors from financial collapse," Bunkley writes. The view is shared:
Full Story: Was taxpayer-owned GM right to give away a Corvette to a Detroit pitcher? - Drive On: A conversation about the cars and trucks we drive - USATODAY.com