Global HeavyLift Holdings, LLC
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Future Of The Auto Industry - Crisis On Asimov: A Vision Of 2085 Dr. Sheila Ronis eMOTION! REPORTS.Com Myron Stokes, PublisherWe strongly recommend reading of this extraordinary work "Crisis On Asimov: A Vision of 2085" that delves into the intricacies of a possible future, where the laws of physics have changed as a result of heightened understanding and application thereof, cars no longer have wheels, living is either below ground or in massive orbital floating cities, and colonies have been established on the Moon and Mars.
Enjoy, with a good libation... Cheers, ASIMOV522 months ago
Global HeavyLift Holdings, LLC
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Gm Presentation3While we are impressed with this presentation, it, like so many past and current analyses of the difficulties facing GM while offering potential solutions, fails to acknowledge the realities of economic war waged against it and other core elements of the U.S. manufacturing/economic base. One must understand the dynamics of predatory marketing strategies fostered, fomented, encouraged and perpetuated by certain governments; very much inclusive of China.
The intent of these strategies is not to render their home based firms/enterprises hyper-competitive against their American counterparts, or whichever the target country, but to eliminate them.
As a colleague said, history has shown that, with few exceptions, whenever U.S. firms are taken over by an offshore firm, the ultimate result is dismantling, not growth and inclusion within the corporate architecture.
Companies like GM, Ford, Toyota, Honda and Boeing are not to be viewed just as business entities with first allegiances to stakeholders in line with core fiduciary responsibilities, but as entities being akin to nations in influence owing to massive global economic footprints. Moreover, the auto industry is a volume business, sustainable only through mass production and sales as the primary revenue driver.
Otherwise, a GM would be rendered as nothing more than a profitable cottage industry participant, incapable of reprising its role as the engine of military operational sustainability in a time of War.
Indeed, it goes without saying that the industrial base and the defense industrial base are one and the same.
It is only by taking a systemic, holistic approach to difficulties of this magnitude --GM’s present issues -- using the ideals of systems science, that equitable and long lasting solutions can be conceptualized and implemented.
Expansion, not contraction, is more of an appropriate approach here, in line with its true and traditional role.
Again, a well done presentation otherwise.12 months ago
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