The World According to Warren

Robert Farago
by Robert Farago

Warren Brown is nothing if not ambitious in his defense of the indefensible (i.e. GM CEO Rick Wagoner). Rather than just raise a[nother] cheer for the man who’s spent the last decade-plus jamming the yoke forward on General Motors’ inexorable descent into bankruptcy, the Washington Post carmudgeon decided to rewrite the entire history of the Japanese “invasion” of the American automotive market. But before he does that, Warren upbraids those who’ve called for Toyota Prez Katsuaki Watanabe to resign, suggesting that Watanabe and Wagoner are birds of a feather, getting flocked together. “GM, as we all know, has lost substantially more than $1.7 billion. In fact, it has lost $72.3 billion since 2004 under Wagoner’s reign. By that measurement, applying Fire the Coach rules, Wagoner is 40 times more deserving of dismissal than Watanabe. But here’s arguing that all of that is sloppy logic and in many ways inherently unfair. Here’s also suggesting that Fire the Coach management will solve nothing — or remedy very little — in an arena where game policy is athwart common sense, as it is and has been in a United States absent effective industrial and energy policies.” Same old you-know-what, different wrapper. Brown is once again, blaming everyone BUT Wagoner for GM’s chronic, shameful self-destruction.

“Historically, the playing field in the United States has been saturated with cheap gasoline. Domestic teams taking that field usually did so with big wheels, big horsepower and a seemingly insatiable thirst for fuel. Consumers went mad for those teams. The automotive media, including yours truly, egged everyone on, declaring the only good horsepower as more horsepower. A few nanny-nanny-boo-boo types objected. But politicians and regulators by and large went with the crowd — that is, the votes.”

Bottom line: we’re all guilty (except you-know-who). In fact, it’s a good thing no one dropped a cigarette butt on that gasoline-soaked field. But I digress. No wait; Warren’s got that covered. So let’s skip ahead to the current “difficulties,” brought to you by those evil money men.

“Finally, the game changed horribly. It turned out that its financing was phony, or, at least not as legitimate or as solid as it had been reputed to be. The finance and big insurance companies that controlled the cash were shaky. Credit tightened and squeezed the life out of the automobile consumer market, and not even mighty Toyota could escape that pain.”

Is there an emoticon for a sneer? Meanwhile, Warren dares to trot-out the “m” word for Red Ink Rick.

“Wagoner has done a marvelous job of returning a long-declining GM to global admiration in terms of product design, quality and reliability. It is extremely difficult to turn a profit in that kind of extremely expensive turnaround. It is next to impossible to do it in a globally collapsed credit market.

Neither executive should be dismissed. Both men should retain their positions and be allowed to fight it out until the final whistle blows — under industrial, energy and financial policies that make better sense for all of us.”

Oy vey.

Robert Farago
Robert Farago

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  • Buickman Buickman on Jan 05, 2009

    what people fail to realize is that Red Ink Rick was put in place by the bankster controlled Board of Bystanders. he was made CFO at 39, much younger than many more qualified and senior executives. heck, he doesn't even have an accounting degree. the man lost gobs of market share as head of North American Operations and was part of the team that did the Fiat Fiasco. he has the continued support of the Board ( whose bankers he has enriched through asset sales) since he has eliminated over 100,000 union jobs with their associated benefits, which was in fact the original reason he was annointed Permanent Puppet.

  • Anonymous Anonymous on Jan 05, 2009
    “GM, as we all know, has lost substantially more than $1.7 billion. In fact, it has lost $72.3 billion since 2004 under Wagoner’s reign. By that measurement, applying Fire the Coach rules, Wagoner is 40 times more deserving of dismissal than Watanabe." At least 40 times more deserving, and probably about 40 times less likely. While Toyota is reporting a loss for the most recent year, they still grew market share, something GM hasn't been able to claim in practically forever.
  • Mebgardner I test drove a 2023 2.5 Rav4 last year. I passed on it because it was a very noisy interior, and handled poorly on uneven pavement (filled potholes), which Tucson has many. Very little acoustic padding mean you talk loudly above 55 mph. The forums were also talking about how the roof leaks from not properly sealed roof rack holes, and door windows leaking into the lower door interior. I did not stick around to find out if all that was true. No talk about engine troubles though, this is new info to me.
  • Dave Holzman '08 Civic (stick) that I bought used 1/31/12 with 35k on the clock. Now at 159k.It runs as nicely as it did when I bought it. I love the feel of the car. The most expensive replacement was the AC compressor, I think, but something to do with the AC that went at 80k and cost $1300 to replace. It's had more stuff replaced than I expected, but not enough to make me want to ditch a car that I truly enjoy driving.
  • ToolGuy Let's review: I am a poor unsuccessful loser. Any car company which introduced an EV which I could afford would earn my contempt. Of course I would buy it, but I wouldn't respect them. 😉
  • ToolGuy Correct answer is the one that isn't a Honda.
  • 1995 SC Man it isn't even the weekend yet
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