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WORD COUNT
665
MAY 13, 2008
AMERICAN
CARS – ENJOY THEM WHILE YOU CAN – by Donald Kaul
Packard,
Studebaker, Hudson, Auburn, Oldsmobile, DeSoto, Pierce-Arrow, Stutz,
Cord, Mammon, Dusenberg, Nash, Franklin, Edsel, LaSalle, Essex, Stanley,
Graham, Reo, Crosley, Kaiser---the pages of automotive history are heavy
with the obituaries of car nameplates that have gone on to that Great
Junkyard in the Sky.
Why should Pontiac be any different, or Chrysler for that matter? It’s
no great tragedy, at least not one that we haven’t experienced time and
time again. It’s been obvious for some time that the global auto
industry was overstocked in production capacity and understocked in
customers. Some winnowing was inevitable.
Right now it seems that American manufacturers are the ones being
winnowed. Chrysler is CURRENTLY on life-support, Italian style, and
General Motors is undergoing a series of painful amputations. Whether
either can survive remains an open question. It would be a tragedy to
lose them. Not the bogus tragedy referred to earlier---an automotive
icon of your youth disappears, so what? -- -but a real, practical
tragedy; hundreds of thousands of jobs gone, whole towns dead.
It was and is worth trying to save these companies but there comes a
time when the situation becomes hopeless and it’s time to cut your
losses and move on. We’re not there yet, but you can see it from here.
To one who grew up in mid-Twentieth Century Detroit the thought of GM
collapsing is almost unimaginable. It was the all-powerful Ozymandias
of the auto industry---“Look on my works, ye mighty, and despair,” it
seemed to say.
But now we’ve moved to the close of that Shelley poem:
“Round the decay of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
“The lone
and level sands stretch far away.”
Or, as we like to call it these days: Detroit.
Actually, downtown Detroit doesn’t look too bad; it’s got a pulse. Like
so many center cities these days it exists primarily as an entertainment
center, with extravagant athletic and cultural facilities as well as
fine hotels, restaurants and casinos. But move off into the
neighborhoods---former neighborhoods really---and Shelley’s desolate
vision is made flesh. Much of the city is a wasteland of vacant lots
and derelict buildings framed by weeds growing through long-unused
sidewalks.
There’ll be dozens of other cities joining Detroit in the urban ash-heap
if the automakers go down.
Car companies die for a variety of reasons, only sometimes because they
make bad cars. More often it’s mismanagement that does them in. That’s
pretty much been the case here in recent years. Our auto executives have
been locked in a mindset that believed a decent profit could be turned
only by making big cars, trucks and vans. Which was fine so long as the
American public loved big, not so fine now with $4-a-gallon gas a recent
memory. When the mood turned to small, the Japanese manufacturers moved
in and ate their lunch.
You could make a case that Chrysler stopped being a car company years
ago, that it invented the van and was content to make its money on them,
with cars as an afterthought. Now it’s going to be run by an Italian
company that makes its money on small cars, very small. We’ll see.
General Motors was conceived nearly as century ago as an automotive
giant that would have a specific car for every income class. Cadillac
and Buick were the luxury brands with Chevrolet and Oldsmobile for the
common man. Then they decided there was a hole to be filled in the
luxury field and the LaSalle was born. The Pontiac was developed to fit
between Olds and Chevy.
All of this demanded a huge dealer network and a vast bureaucratic
superstructure. It worked, but to keep people buying cars they had to
make cars that wore out quickly and “planned obsolescence” became the
watchword. That was when old Ozymandias started to crumble.
I wish our car companies well, I really do. If they go away we will
feel the pain in places we didn’t know we had places.
--
Don Kaul
is a two-time Pulitzer Prize-losing Washington correspondent who, by his
own account, is right more than he's wrong. Email:
dkaul2@earthlink.net --
A photo of Donald Kaul is available
CLICK HERE
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