Ford is offering employee pricing to all customers because they can't get people to buy their SUVs and trucks. People often wonder if employee pricing is real. It
is the real deal. The idea behind it is to reduce existing inventory before the new models come in.
The employee pricing is good on almost all Ford, Lincoln and Mercury 2008 and 2009 models -- from now until the first week of 2009. The only vehicle
not covered is the Ford F-150 truck, which was once the most popular vehicle in America.
In related news, the auto bailout has a flat tire at the moment. That's good news for our country -- when you view it from a vantage point of sound economic principle. In short, it's a lousy idea to bailout industrial corporations.
There
will be another big push for the automaker bailout when Obama comes in, but Clark hopes it doesn't happen. Not because he wants people to suffer and lose jobs, but because our country suffers when you bailout a company that made too many bad decisions.
Want proof of that statement?
Read the New York Times' piece about the outcome of England's $16.5 billion of automaker British Leyland back in the '80s. Leyland ended up failing anyway and all that taxpayer money went down the toilet.
Meanwhile, other industries are lining up at the bailout teller window looking for a handout. We have to do more than just draw a line in the sand -- we have to stand up as a country and say "no more."
Think Clark is a hypocrite for opposing an automaker bailout, yet begrudgingly supporting one for Wall Street? You've got to realize that, as we see in the latter example, capitalism needs capital to function. But that's a far cry from bailing out a private industry.