Michael Moore was a recent guest on Larry King talking about the auto bailout. Moore’s terrific documentary, “Roger & Me,” targeted the auto companies in 1989 while they closed plants and laid off workers. Moore tells Larry King that in the movie when the GM representative said that 30,000 people could be laid off in Flint, he thought it was a joke. Years later, it came true. Moore says he’s conflicted, as many of us are, about what to do. He doesn’t have any confidence in the leaders of this industry.
Moore doesn’t want to see the loss of more jobs in the US auto industry. He also doesn’t trust the current management teams that got them into this mess. Hard to argue against either position.
I don’t know if I can go so far as Moore to believe that the government could do a better job running these companies. However, it’s clear that this manufacturing capacity could be a great asset if applied to an overhaul of the US transportation system.
I liked Michael Moore as the bumbling everyman in Roger & Me and I’ve liked his movies less and less as they’ve become strident setups. I was happy to see Moore in this interview get back to something like his old self. It’s somehow personal again.
Since this interview, the CEOs of the Big Three had a humbling day on Capitol Hill, unable to defend their use of separate corporate jets to bring them to the hearing and more importantly, unable to articulate what they would do with the money they’re asking for. They’ve supposedly gone back to Detroit to work on a proposal and muster the courage to go back to Washington in December.