Originally Posted By: Cardinal49
Originally Posted By: LS2JSTS
Originally Posted By: Cardinal49
This goes back to one of the previous threads about domestic vs, foreign. All car companies are global. There is no domestic vs. foreign. GM has no loyalty to the "buy American crowd". They will show the Chevy commercial with John Mellancamp while they invest billions in creating Chinese jobs. I am not bashing GM, this is just reality. Buyers need to purchase the vehicle that best fits their needs and not worry about domestic vs. foreign because the manufacturers don't care.
Claiming GM has no loyalty to their home market is pure rubbish...and trying to prove it on the back of a couple billion dollar investment in China is a false measurement at best. Sure GM is investing a couple billion in China to serve their huge market, but I guess you dont count the billions GM has invested here in the States over the same time frame? GM's investment in the US/Canada over the last two years has exceeded 6 billion dollars.....
12/7/09 GM Invests 336 Million at Detroit-Hamtramck Plant
1/26/10 GM Invests 246 Million in Baltimore Electric Motors/Hybrid Components
4/27/10 GM Invests 890 Million at 5 Engi...nce and Bedford
4/21/10 GM Invests 257 Million in Fairfax and Hamtramck to support next gen Malibu
8/18/10 GM Invests additional 20 Million in Bay City
9/17/10 GM Invests 483 Million at Spring Hill Engine
9/29/10 GM Invests additional 23.5 Million in Baltimore
10/28/10 GM Invests 190 Million at Lansing Grand River Plant
10/20/10 GM Invests 37 Million in Lansing Delta Twp Plant
10/7/10 GM Invests 145 Million at Orion Assembly
11/24/10 GM Invests additional 163 Million at Flint Engine
3/30/11 GM Invests 30 Million at Pontiac Stamping
4/12/11 GM Invests 100 Million at Rochester Operations
5/31/11 GM Lansing Grand River gets Additional 88 Million Investment
5/26/11 GM Invests 331 Million in Arlington Assembly
5/13/11 GM Invests Additional 109 Million at Flint Engine and Bay City Components
5/4/11 GM Invests 131 Million at Bowling Green Assembly
6/13/11 GM Invests 20 Million at Fairfax Assembly
6/10/11 GM Invests additional 47 Million at Fairfax Powertrain
6/8/11 GM Invests 49 Million at Bedford Powertrain
6/6/11 GM Invests 130 Million at Warren Tech Center
7/18/11 GM Invests 328 Million at Flint Assembly
7/12/11 GM Invests Total of 287 Million at Toledo Transmission
...ftr, a similar list could be put together for Ford as well, in my book this qualifies as meeting a "higher standard"
I disagree. Honda, Toyota, Nissan, BMW, Subaru, Hyundai, etc have also invested billions in the US. All of these companies, as well as GM and Ford need to do so to compete effectively in the US market.
I do not beleive that GM or Ford's commitment to the US is any greater than the companies I listed above.
I fully support people buying what best suits their needs. If they have had years of wonderful service from GM that is great. If their family member works at the Ford plant and they want to buy a Ford, I applaud that. I also support the family that lives in Alabama buying a Honda to support their local economy or a guy that buys a Fiat from their brother-in-law that works in a Fiat dealer.
I do think it is naive for a buyer to purchase a GM or Ford with the belief that they are being "good Americans". I am convinced that GM does not have the same loyalty to these buyers.
Originally Posted By: LS2JSTS
Originally Posted By: Cardinal49
This goes back to one of the previous threads about domestic vs, foreign. All car companies are global. There is no domestic vs. foreign. GM has no loyalty to the "buy American crowd". They will show the Chevy commercial with John Mellancamp while they invest billions in creating Chinese jobs. I am not bashing GM, this is just reality. Buyers need to purchase the vehicle that best fits their needs and not worry about domestic vs. foreign because the manufacturers don't care.
Claiming GM has no loyalty to their home market is pure rubbish...and trying to prove it on the back of a couple billion dollar investment in China is a false measurement at best. Sure GM is investing a couple billion in China to serve their huge market, but I guess you dont count the billions GM has invested here in the States over the same time frame? GM's investment in the US/Canada over the last two years has exceeded 6 billion dollars.....
12/7/09 GM Invests 336 Million at Detroit-Hamtramck Plant
1/26/10 GM Invests 246 Million in Baltimore Electric Motors/Hybrid Components
4/27/10 GM Invests 890 Million at 5 Engi...nce and Bedford
4/21/10 GM Invests 257 Million in Fairfax and Hamtramck to support next gen Malibu
8/18/10 GM Invests additional 20 Million in Bay City
9/17/10 GM Invests 483 Million at Spring Hill Engine
9/29/10 GM Invests additional 23.5 Million in Baltimore
10/28/10 GM Invests 190 Million at Lansing Grand River Plant
10/20/10 GM Invests 37 Million in Lansing Delta Twp Plant
10/7/10 GM Invests 145 Million at Orion Assembly
11/24/10 GM Invests additional 163 Million at Flint Engine
3/30/11 GM Invests 30 Million at Pontiac Stamping
4/12/11 GM Invests 100 Million at Rochester Operations
5/31/11 GM Lansing Grand River gets Additional 88 Million Investment
5/26/11 GM Invests 331 Million in Arlington Assembly
5/13/11 GM Invests Additional 109 Million at Flint Engine and Bay City Components
5/4/11 GM Invests 131 Million at Bowling Green Assembly
6/13/11 GM Invests 20 Million at Fairfax Assembly
6/10/11 GM Invests additional 47 Million at Fairfax Powertrain
6/8/11 GM Invests 49 Million at Bedford Powertrain
6/6/11 GM Invests 130 Million at Warren Tech Center
7/18/11 GM Invests 328 Million at Flint Assembly
7/12/11 GM Invests Total of 287 Million at Toledo Transmission
...ftr, a similar list could be put together for Ford as well, in my book this qualifies as meeting a "higher standard"
I disagree. Honda, Toyota, Nissan, BMW, Subaru, Hyundai, etc have also invested billions in the US. All of these companies, as well as GM and Ford need to do so to compete effectively in the US market.
I do not beleive that GM or Ford's commitment to the US is any greater than the companies I listed above.
I fully support people buying what best suits their needs. If they have had years of wonderful service from GM that is great. If their family member works at the Ford plant and they want to buy a Ford, I applaud that. I also support the family that lives in Alabama buying a Honda to support their local economy or a guy that buys a Fiat from their brother-in-law that works in a Fiat dealer.
I do think it is naive for a buyer to purchase a GM or Ford with the belief that they are being "good Americans". I am convinced that GM does not have the same loyalty to these buyers.