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GM bailout oiled the wheels to eject CEO

President Obama’s firing of General Motors CEO Rick Wagoner does little more than showcase our empty suit of a president’s contempt for white-collar employees.

GM’s woes were caused by a combination of inept executives, shameful unions and harmful government employees. Yet Obama is not attempting to get rid of either UAW head Ron Gettelfinger or Michigan’s anti-business governor, “Jobless Jenny” Granholm.

In fact, Wagoner had done far more to reduce GM’s bloated cost structure than the unions and government combined.

All companies should refuse to accept these unconstitutional bailouts – and as Wagoner is learning, woe to the CEOs unwise enough to heed this advice.

Mark Kalinowski

New York, N.Y.

Stimulus OK’d, Obama should now work to create jobs

The recently enacted $787 billion economic stimulus plan designed to create jobs includes about $300 billion in tax cuts for individuals and businesses, which will not create jobs because companies are not hiring and consumers are saving their money, not making purchases they can postpone.

The Commerce Department recently reported a U.S. savings rate of 5 percent, which is the highest since 1995.

A significant portion of the remaining $487 billion goes to social programs, which will help the needy in some instances, but will not create jobs in the private sector where they are needed.

Examples are $50 million to the National Endowment for the Arts; $380 million for women, infants and children’s welfare; $2.4 billion for neighborhood stabilization; $160 million for “paid volunteers” in community service; $20 billion for food stamps; $150 million for the Smithsonian; and $55 million for the Historic Preservation Fund.

The administration’s projection of creating 3.5 million jobs by the end of 2010 is optimistically off target because it is based on an average unemployment rate of 8.1 percent for 2009, which was hit in February and is rising.

It now appears the economic stimulus plan will create about 2.5 million jobs, which doesn’t come close to replacing the 4.4 million jobs lost in this recession, plus the 500,000 to 600,000 more jobs lost each passing month.

For 2009, the Obama administration predicts a 1.2 percent decline in gross domestic product – but a majority of economists predict a 2 percent decrease in GDP. And in 2010, it’s a 3.2 percent projected increase by the administration, but a 2 percent increase predicted by the economists.

For the fourth quarter of 2008, the Bush administration projected a 3.8 percent decrease in GDP, but the actual decrease was 6.2 percent. Essentially, the administrations are generating economic policies based on optimistic projections of our GDP, but prudence might dictate more conservative projections.

Maybe the president should end his ongoing campaign mode of governing, curtail his continuous campaign and media appearances, start operating as the chief executive of this country and concentrate on creating good-paying American jobs as his primary objective.

Donald A. Moskowitz

Londonderry, N.H.

Our Digital Archive

This blog page archives the entire digital archive of the Tucson Citizen from 1993 to 2009. It was gleaned from a database that was not intended to be displayed as a public web archive. Therefore, some of the text in some stories displays a little oddly. Also, this database did not contain any links to photos, so though the archive contains numerous captions for photos, there are no links to any of those photos.

There are more than 230,000 articles in this archive.

In TucsonCitizen.com Morgue, Part 1, we have preserved the Tucson Citizen newspaper's web archive from 2006 to 2009. To view those stories (all of which are duplicated here) go to Morgue Part 1

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