Don't Make Me Turn This Car Around!

U.S. auto sales take a nosedive 3

Chrysler and General Motors sold 19 percent less automobiles in the U.S. this March than they did last March, according to new sales figures. Ford reported a sales drop of 14 percent in March 2008 compared to March 2007, and even Toyota, which has reported steady sales through other hard times, reported that sales dropped 10 percent. As has been the case for a while, sales of big ol' gas guzzlers (relied upon by American companies) decreased, while sales of smaller, daintier-sipping vehicles were steadier. High gas prices, a weak economy, and the credit crunch are taking their toll, and analysts predict that 2008 may be the worst year for the auto industry in a decade.

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  1. Delay And Deny's avatar

    Delay And Deny Posted 11:47 am
    02 Apr 2008

    Not Sure Which Way to Go

    For me, it's the "Green Revolution" that makes me not want to buy.   With hydrogen cars, electric cards, new hybrids, alcohol cars slated to appear after 2010, who would want to be stuck paying a 5 year loan on a gas car?
    Nissan to unveil electric vehicles in U.S. in 2010

    http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/nissan-unveil-elect ...
    With the price of gas as it, having a gas guzzler is literally like getting paid less money than your neighbor for the same amount of work, as you will be out hundreds of thousands of dollars every year paying for gas!
  2. caniscandida Posted 3:48 pm
    02 Apr 2008

    Oh, the problem with brethren!Did parents actually say that?: "Don't make me turn this car around"?
    Fortunately, I, an only child, was just left in the back seat happily playing with my dinosaurs, and did not have to squabble with brethren.
    There was indeed that very happy, traumatic moment, when my father was nearly eaten by an alligator in the Everglades, because he hard-headedly refused to heed the nice Park Guard's instruction, "Do not try to feed the alligators!," and once the Guard drove off, insisted on offering a middling-sized but hungry and ambitious alligator a slice of stale bread, while himself standing on a slippery slope.
    What a lesson that would have been for him, had he been eaten!
    And, what a lesson for all of this, if we could have learned to look deeper, closer to home.
  3. usandthem Posted 11:33 am
    03 Apr 2008

    Learn the lessonWhile I do not feel good about americans losing jobs in the auto industry.I do say live and learn that the time for gas gusslers is long past and if the american auto industry can't see that and adapt,then they deserve to lose business to an adaptable Japan,China,India,and Korea.

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