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Half-Baked in America (Clint Eastwood ad was bad history. We won't get our Chrysler money back)
National Review ^ | 02/07/2012 | Rich Lowry

Posted on 02/07/2012 4:47:04 AM PST by SeekAndFind

If Clint Eastwood narrated “The Cat in the Hat,” the words of Dr. Seuss would instantly take on a menacing authority. He could read the latest worthless United Nations condemnation of Syria and make Bashar Assad tremble.

So if you’re Chrysler and want to air a propagandistic advertisement implicitly touting your government bailout as what’s best about America, Eastwood is a natural frontman. The movie tough-guy and former Republican mayor of Carmel, Calif., will make everyone take notice. He will dare you not to believe him. He will invest a sugarcoated narrative of Detroit’s comeback with every bit of his gravelly voiced credibility.

Eastwood’s two-minute ad during halftime was one of the most memorable of the Super Bowl (putting aside all the Doritos spots, of course). Eastwood walks toward the camera in a dark tunnel and says, in his slightly threatening near-whisper, “It’s halftime.” Lest you think that’s a cue to get up and reload on nachos and beer, he intones, “It’s halftime in America, too.”

What follows is a half-baked tale about the revival of the automotive industry wrapped in economic nationalism: Dirty Harry does chest-thumping corporatism. Eastwood says that Americans are hurting and that “the people of Detroit know a little something about this. They almost lost everything. But we all pulled together. Now, Motor City is fighting again.”

We all pulled together? As euphemism, this is clever; as history, it is false. Congress never approved the bailouts. Given the option to do so explicitly, it declined. The Bush and Obama administrations acted on their own, diverting TARP funds to Detroit regardless of the letter of the law. In Eastwood’s telling, a legally dubious act of executive highhandedness qualifies as patriotic collective action.

By this standard, any initiative of government must be a stirring exercise in people’s power. Remember when we all pulled together to back the solar-panel maker Solyndra to the tune of $500 million? Right now, we are all pulling together to try to force Catholic institutions to pay for contraceptives and morning-after abortifacients for their employees. See? There’s nothing we can’t do — together.

What Chrysler and GM desperately needed in their extremity was to go through Chapter 11 reorganization to pare down wages and benefits, shed uneconomical dealerships, and ditch unnecessary brands. When the government got its hooks in them, it politicized this process and threw some $80 billion at the companies. Since we’ll never get an estimated $23 billion back, we all must be “pulling together” behind Detroit still.

Amid all the patriotic piety, Eastwood neglects to mention that Chrysler is now 58.5 percent owned by Fiat, an Italian company. The heart-tugging images of Turin, Italy, apparently were left on the cutting-room floor.

Walking near the end of his tunnel, Eastwood assures us of our hoped-for national comeback: “Detroit’s showing us it can be done. And what’s true about them is true about all of us.” Yet if Detroit is the model for our future, we should prepare for national collapse. Yes, it is getting a boost from resurgent auto sales. Otherwise, it remains a byword for urban apocalypse. More than anything, the city is a standing warning of the perils of social disorder and unaffordable, dysfunctional government.

The entire tone of the Eastwood ad is martial. We must resist “discord” and “come together,” we have to take a “punch” and “win.” Understandably, Obama politicos David Axelrod and Dan Pfeiffer immediately tweeted their approval. The ad echoes President Barack Obama’s rhetoric of military-like national unity from his State of the Union address. This message is profoundly at odds with the messy competition and self-interested individual effort necessarily attendant to a true free-market economy.

It is good that Chrysler and GM are now off life-support, but they took a lot of money we’ll never recover. A simple apology would be nice. Surely, Clint Eastwood could be hired to deliver an impressively sincere-sounding one.

— Rich Lowry is editor of National Review


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chrysler; clinteastwood

1 posted on 02/07/2012 4:47:14 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Great article


2 posted on 02/07/2012 4:51:48 AM PST by from occupied ga (your own government is your most dangerous enemy)
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To: SeekAndFind
We all pulled together?

No one asked me!

3 posted on 02/07/2012 4:58:47 AM PST by Rummyfan (Iraq: it's not about Iraq anymore, it's about the USA!)
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To: SeekAndFind
Dirty Harry was had.
['The Punk' got lucky ;-)]
4 posted on 02/07/2012 4:59:29 AM PST by Condor51 (Yo Hoffa, so you want to 'take out conservatives'. Well okay Jr - I'm your Huckleberry)
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To: SeekAndFind
Sadly, Detroit IS showing us the way....the way we will BE if the spending and welfare state is not stopped or at least slowed down!!

Detroit is a SCARY, DANGEROUS, AWFUL place and I feel sorry for people that are STUCK in this hellhole.

5 posted on 02/07/2012 5:00:38 AM PST by Ann Archy ( ABORTION...the HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: SeekAndFind
“Since we’ll never get an estimated $23 billion back, we all must be “pulling together” behind Detroit still.”

Exactly. Next time I hear a Lib say that Chrysler paid it all back I'm going to point out the fact that the taxpayer's and creditors got stiffed for billions.

6 posted on 02/07/2012 5:01:45 AM PST by tobyhill
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To: SeekAndFind
Sadly, Detroit IS showing us the way....the way we will BE if the spending and welfare state is not stopped or at least slowed down!!

Detroit is a SCARY, DANGEROUS, AWFUL place and I feel sorry for people that are STUCK in this hellhole.

7 posted on 02/07/2012 5:03:28 AM PST by Ann Archy ( ABORTION...the HUMAN Sacrifice to the god of Convenience.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Did anyone here get to vote on the bailout? “We” the people did not make this mess; a few in Washington force fed us.


8 posted on 02/07/2012 5:06:13 AM PST by Hattie
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To: Hattie

As Marc said on Rush’s show yesterday: Chrysler, the Italian owned US Company which makes its cars in Windsor Ontario!

If it was not for the desparate situation we are in here in the US, this would be comical. We have a nation of government schooled dolts led now by an anti American not eligible to serve President, and no one seems to notice.
I cannot call him a traitor though because I think in the general sense, one has to be from the country they subvert to be an actual traitor and His Excellency does not qualify in my book.


9 posted on 02/07/2012 5:15:11 AM PST by Mouton (Voting is an opiate of the electorate. Nothing changes no matter who wins..)
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To: Condor51
Dirty Harry was had.

Dirty Whorey was bought and paid for.

10 posted on 02/07/2012 5:17:07 AM PST by from occupied ga (your own government is your most dangerous enemy)
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To: Hattie
Did anyone here get to vote on the bailout?

Nope, but in a sense by voting 0 into office, a majority of the voters decided to rob the rest of us twice. First I suspect that the taxes paid by those who voted against 0 on average were higher than those who voted for the corrupt communist currently running the government like Chicago (or Lagos). And second, we were robbed of any say in how our stolen money was spent.

11 posted on 02/07/2012 5:21:35 AM PST by from occupied ga (your own government is your most dangerous enemy)
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To: from occupied ga

The usually wimpy Lowry found a pair for this article. Too bad he’s a Romney guy, as Romney would have done the same thing as Obama.


12 posted on 02/07/2012 6:04:55 AM PST by gramho12
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To: tobyhill
No different than the stockholders and bondholders at GM who were fleeced by the UAW and the Donks.
13 posted on 02/07/2012 6:24:06 AM PST by Eric in the Ozarks (Eh ?)
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To: gramho12
..Romney...

It's a real condemnation of the Republican party when the best you can say about the Republican establishment's choice is that he isn't 0bama, or at least not quite. And when the best you can say about the main rival (Neut) is that he isn't quite as bad as Romney. And, the best thing you can say about the most conservative of the remaining field (Paul) is that he's only slightly crazy. And, the best thing you can say about who's left (Santorum) is that he's slightly more conservative than (Neut).

Although I'll vote for any of them rather than that braying pompous arrogant ignoranus, 0bama

14 posted on 02/07/2012 9:13:22 AM PST by from occupied ga (your own government is your most dangerous enemy)
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