My thoughts on the Auto Bailout as a mechanic;
Where was congress in 1964 when Studebaker/Packard was in trouble?
South Bend, Indiana's economy was wiped out in 1964 as a result of this auto closure; despite engineering that was ahead of it's time (first American production car with Disc Brakes; standard on the Avanti in 1962, optional on the Lark and Hawk) they were unable to compete with the "Big Three" because of significant body style changes, a lack of effective marketing to youth, and poor buisness decisions made during the merger with Packard (based in Detroit) in 1958. They were the last of the independents.
The South Bend factory shut down in '64 and moved to Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, producing vehicles from spare parts in 1965-66 with re-labeled Chevrolet engines (The Skybolt 6; a 235 Chevy 6 and the Thunderbolt; a 283 Chevy V8) until it's liquidation and conversion into the Studebaker-Worthington holding company, now an industrial finance division of the Bank of Long Island, NY.
Nash, De Soto, Hudson, and Kaiser/Fraiser (the other independents, plus a few others) were all merged (over the course of about 10 years, from around 1958 to 1968, give or take a few) to form AMC, which was then absorbed by Chrysler, and abandoned completely by Chrysler Corp by 1981.
GM in the early 00's "introduced" sliding rear roof technology on the Hummer, H2, and Cadillac Wagons which was actually available on the Studebaker Lark Wagonaire, in 1962). They sued the two engineers that "resurrected" the Studebaker name in 2001 (basing the new Avanti on a Corvette chassis, and the XUV on the Hummer) for copyright infringement on the XUV model and settled out of court in 2004. GM claimed they copied the Hummer with the Studebaker XUV, and Studebaker claimed patent infringement on it's previous models. This drove Studebaker out of business once again...
I guess my point is that Studebaker never got a fair shake or a bailout. They had a superior product, and were ruined by poor decisions. My heart goes out to the folks back then in '64 and
right now in '04-'08 who have lost their jobs and pensions. My friends at the Chrysler plant included, who make low $20K's and are now unemployed. They are the real victims here.
However, Studebaker wasn't bailed out of their situation, and therefore, in my opinion, neither should GM or Chrysler.
They destroyed the competition, "borrowed" from others, got greedy with SUV production, ignored the consumer, lured the poor into financing, and fought against safety regulations tooth and nail. Now it's coming back to bite them in the ass. They deserve a taste of their own cooking; It is certainly well-seasoned.
Here is a photo of a supercharged 1962 Avanti. In my opinion, It's the Mod-chipped RGB blue-LED Duo RX of automobiles. (24mpg hwy in 1962!)
P.S. I have a 6-cyl 95 Ford Ranger as a work truck, and a Hot Rod on blocks. If I get another vehicle, It will be a 40+ mpg Honda or a hybrid/diesel Toyota pickup truck to replace the 150K Ranger.