Quote:
Divine intervention might to do it.
I think the frustration for a lot of folks is Rick and Bob are competent but not revolutionary. The scope of the problems at GM seems to require greater vision to find real solutions and that seems to be lacking.
As for what will bring GM back to health, it is a problem beyond my grasp.
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Thanks for your honest answer. I'll be truthful as well, I don't have a master plan as well, ideas that I think might help, but not some master plan. I guess the problem I saw with the original quote I responded to (with the above reply and question) was that if you are going to say something needs an overhaul, but leave it at that then why complain? If change is needed, what is the change? To change something just for changes sake is a fools folly. Continuing something that is sinking fast is a folly as well. I don't want to see GM go the way of the dodo. If people have ideas that they can share I'd love to see them.
Complaining about a problem won't solve it. Not buying a GM vehicle won't solve it. Ideas and foresight and a willingness to buy GM products and show a loyalty even if it isn't the "TOP" vehicle in it's class will help. I don't want this company to go under. This slow bleeding of GM actually bleeds my car "soul" as well. I think there are others out there as myself that feel this way. I don't have delusions of grandeur that GM will return to it's glorious heydays of the 50's and 60's. I do have hopes and aspirations that GM will trim the fat, build up the muscle and plant themselves firmly back into the American automobile landscape as a leader for decades to come.
