Iacocca: ‘Some of us are sick and tired of people who call free speech treason’

When it comes to politics, former Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca is generally not much of a player. When he has dabbled in politics, Iacocca is generally known for being a Republican — he was close with Reagan, he endorsed Bush in 2000, and backed Dick DeVos’ gubernatorial campaign in Michigan last year.

But if Iacocca’s new book is any indication, the retired businessman seems to be moving in a different direction. (thanks to E.S. for the tip)

Am I the only guy in this country who’s fed up with what’s happening? Where the hell is our outrage? We should be screaming bloody murder. We’ve got a gang of clueless bozos steering our ship of state right over a cliff, we’ve got corporate gangsters stealing us blind, and we can’t even clean up after a hurricane much less build a hybrid car. But instead of getting mad, everyone sits around and nods their heads when the politicians say, “Stay the course.”

Stay the course? You’ve got to be kidding. This is America, not the damned Titanic. I’ll give you a sound bite: Throw the bums out!

You might think I’m getting senile, that I’ve gone off my rocker, and maybe I have. But someone has to speak up. I hardly recognize this country anymore. The President of the United States is given a free pass to ignore the Constitution, tap our phones, and lead us to war on a pack of lies. Congress responds to record deficits by passing a huge tax cut for the wealthy (thanks, but I don’t need it). The most famous business leaders are not the innovators but the guys in handcuffs. While we’re fiddling in Iraq, the Middle East is burning and nobody seems to know what to do. And the press is waving pom-poms instead of asking hard questions. That’s not the promise of America my parents and yours traveled across the ocean for. I’ve had enough. How about you?

I’ll go a step further. You can’t call yourself a patriot if you’re not outraged…. Why are we in this mess? How did we end up with this crowd in Washington? Well, we voted for them — or at least some of us did. But I’ll tell you what we didn’t do. We didn’t agree to suspend the Constitution. We didn’t agree to stop asking questions or demanding answers. Some of us are sick and tired of people who call free speech treason. Where I come from that’s a dictatorship, not a democracy.

Not bad for a guy a former Bush backer, don’t you think?

The book excerpt from Iacocca’s upcoming release sounds like an unusually stinging criticism of the president he supported publicly just seven years ago. Asking, “Where have all the leaders gone?” Iacocca talked about what he describes as the “Nine Cs of Leadership.”

* Curiosity — “George W. Bush brags about never reading a newspaper. ‘I just scan the headlines,’ he says. Am I hearing this right? He’s the President of the United States and he never reads a newspaper? Thomas Jefferson once said, ‘Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate for a moment to prefer the latter.’ Bush disagrees. As long as he gets his daily hour in the gym, with Fox News piped through the sound system, he’s ready to go.

* Creative — “George Bush prides himself on never changing, even as the world around him is spinning out of control. God forbid someone should accuse him of flip-flopping. There’s a disturbingly messianic fervor to his certainty.”

* Communicate — “The war in Iraq has been, among other things, a grand failure of communication. Bush is like the boy who didn’t cry wolf when the wolf was at the door. After years of being told that all is well, even as the casualties and chaos mount, we’ve stopped listening to him.

* Character — “George Bush has a lot of power. What does it say about his character? Bush has shown a willingness to take bold action on the world stage because he has the power, but he shows little regard for the grievous consequences. He has sent our troops (not to mention hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi citizens) to their deaths—for what? To build our oil reserves? To avenge his daddy because Saddam Hussein once tried to have him killed? To show his daddy he’s tougher? The motivations behind the war in Iraq are questionable, and the execution of the war has been a disaster. A man of character does not ask a single soldier to die for a failed policy.”

* Courage — “Swagger isn’t courage. Tough talk isn’t courage. George Bush comes from a blue-blooded Connecticut family, but he likes to talk like a cowboy. You know, My gun is bigger than your gun. Courage in the twenty-first century doesn’t mean posturing and bravado. Courage is a commitment to sit down at the negotiating table and talk…. Bush can’t even make a public appearance unless the audience has been handpicked and sanitized.”

It goes on from there, blasting Bush’s convictions, charisma, competence, common sense, and ability to manage a crisis. It’s a shame Iacocca didn’t realize this sooner, but I guess it’s better late than never, right?

way to go iacocca! now could you please start a very public speaking tour and keep hammering away at these same themes? after a while people will have to start listening…..

  • Excuse my poor language, but where the f*ck was Iacocca in 2004? I didn’t hear a peep out of him then. Now he is selling a book and he speaks up, like so many others on the right. To quote Mr. Iacocca: “Am I the only guy in this country who’s fed up with what’s happening? Where the hell is our outrage? We should be screaming bloody murder.”

    Tool.

  • Finally, we have a businessman who speaks the truth. Lee Iacocca, may your words ring high and low for change and may they finally wake up the Americans who were asleep at the wheel when they voted for W.

  • I’m torn.

    On one hand I agree with Bubba as my initial reaction was “Ef you. Where have you been? I’ve been fed up and outraged for YEARS.”

    On the other hand, I just can’t seem to assemble the audience Iacocca can, so I’m glad he’s saying it.

  • He and his industry were also about 10 years late in realising that Americans wanted to buy fuel-efficient cars. But, again, better late than never.

    Interesting that he endorsed Kerry. I didn’t remember that either. It wouldn’t surprise me at all to learn that the Kerry people screwed up by not using him enough in their campaign – after all, he’s only a strong, well-respected, common-sense public figure who would have delivered more than a few swing voters. Guess it didn’t fit into Bob Shrum’s brilliant super-genius strategy.

  • Mr Iaccoca, welcome to “the reality based community”.

    Nice Rant! My Republican father-in-law will get a copy, he liked your last book but he might not like this one!

    Hey bubba, Mr Iaccoca has handed us a nice tool for us to use. Let’s not worry too much about whose tool he used to be.

  • I remember when he endorsed Kerry in ’04, and I wondered at the time–and now–why this wasn’t more forcefully pushed by the Kerry campaign. Iacocca has tremendous credibility among the very people who somewhat reluctantly voted for Bush.

    It’s hard to overstate what a bunch of fucking dumbasses those “advisers” were. Mistake after mistake blew an election that we not only could have won, but really should have won.

  • I sent this Iacocca piece to my extended family yesterday. They’re mostly reactionary Republicans and supporters of the Bush Crime Family. For once I didn’t get a flood of RNC talking points in response. I think Iacocca’s words really sting the faith-based crowd. We need more like (the new?) him.

  • Shrum, Brazille and the lot of them should be shunned (I would say have their tongues cut out, but that goes against my peaceful nature). They really have cost the country. Along with Dowd, Cohen, etc.

  • Not to go all negative on our friends, but while I agree with bashing Shrum and the other advisors, lets not let Kerry and Gore off the hook that easily. We think they were Presidential material; if so they should be able to hire competently, know when NOT to listen to advisors, and take responsibility for their own screw ups.

  • Racerx–I deserve the scold. Should have checked first, considering there were a number of business-side republicans and old-school politico/military republicans who did in fact lend their names proudly to the Kerry campaign (I remember sending such info to ‘friends’ who intended to vote for Bush because they felt Bush would keep them “safer.” Bedwetting chickenshites.)

  • Zeitgeist is correct about Gore and Kerry running their own campaigns.

    But, WOW, that’s some “plain speakin'” by Mr Iacocca. Read the entire excerpt from Borders’ site.

    By the way, Donald Trump has been saying much the same thing as Iacocca.

  • What amazes me is that Iaccoca “gets it”! It’s hard to believe that he got all of his perspective on the Bush criminal enterprise from the MSM. He must go surfing on Daily Kos, TPM, Raw Story, the Carpetbagger Report, and other sites on the left side blogosphere. Who knew?

  • Wow, this is pure dynamite!

    “He has sent our troops (not to mention hundreds of thousands of innocent Iraqi citizens) to their deaths—for what? To build our oil reserves? To avenge his daddy because Saddam Hussein once tried to have him killed? To show his daddy he’s tougher?”

    On September 11, 2001, we needed a strong leader more than any other time in our history. We needed a steady hand to guide us out of the ashes. Where was George Bush? He was reading a story about a pet goat to kids in Florida when he heard about the attacks. He kept sitting there for twenty minutes with a baffled look on his face. It’s all on tape. You can see it for yourself. Then, instead of taking the quickest route back to Washington and immediately going on the air to reassure the panicked people of this country, he decided it wasn’t safe to return to the White House. He basically went into hiding for the day—and he told Vice President Dick Cheney to stay put in his bunker. We were all frozen in front of our TVs, scared out of our wits, waiting for our leaders to tell us that we were going to be okay, and there was nobody home. It took Bush a couple of days to get his bearings and devise the right photo op at Ground Zero.

    That was George Bush’s moment of truth, and he was paralyzed. And what did he do when he’d regained his composure? He led us down the road to Iraq—a road his own father had considered disastrous when he was President. But Bush didn’t listen to Daddy. He listened to a higher father. He prides himself on being faith based, not reality based. If that doesn’t scare the crap out of you, I don’t know what will.

    He saves a good zinger for our Democratic “leaders” in congress:

    What is everybody so afraid of? That some bobblehead on Fox News will call them a name? Give me a break. Why don’t you guys show some spine for a change?

    It’s not too late, but it’s getting pretty close. So let’s shake off the horseshit and go to work. Let’s tell ’em all we’ve had enough.

    That’s gotta sting a bit. It should.

  • “We didn’t agree to stop asking questions or demanding answers. Some of us are sick and tired of people who call free speech treason.”

    Glory, glory, hallelujah!

    Thank you, Mr. Iacocca, for your patriotism! Thank you for standing by our country and not the real 9/11 hijackers of our democracy!

    Ask questions. Demand answers!

  • Iaccoca does hit a false note when he says, “Am I the only guy in this country who’s fed up with what’s happening?”. It would be closer to the truth if he’d said “am I the only one of my acquaintances ……. ”
    Other than that, it’s great stuff!

  • What’s a shame is how few Democrats in a position to be heard have been willing to speak out until Republicans show them the way.

    The Gingrich years was when neocon dominance of this country began and it has spun way out of control.

    Did Democrats in Congress make a good effort to prevent this? No.

    Have Democrats been the ones to finally start to do something about it?

    Well, sure, we’ve got a Democratic congress. That’s something. But I would argue that it wasn’t the Democrats who got it for us. (Certainly not those who rejected the 50-state strategy.)

    What got it for us was Republican news anchors who began to feel contempt for the Administration during Hurricane Katrina, with their contempt spreading to the public.

    What continues to get it for us are the cracks when Republicans show they’re no longer behind Bush.

    Are we going to have to recruit all of these Republicans into the Democratic party in order to have people with guts?

    Are Democrats such wusses that we should dump them and back moderate Republicans who care about competency and the Constitution, because it’s not like the Democrats are showing they can do anything for us?

  • I’m glad he’s coming around to the Side of Light, but don’t forget Iacocca was one of the original corporate welfare recipients. Perhaps his actions gave Bush and Cheney and Halliburton and Blackwater the idea to empty the treasury in the name of cronyism today.

  • I always have mixed feelings about Iaccoca, but I’m positive enough that I’ll give him credit for a change of heart here.

    Now let’s hope he starts shouting. We’ve got a popular conservative voice here screaming at the top of his lungs, people need to join the chorus.

  • Actually, Iacocca’s switched sides before – when Chrysler sought loan guarantees in the 1970’s, he credited the Democrats in his “auto-biography”, with words to the effect of:

    “Although I’ve voted Republican much of my life, the Democrats will be there for you when the chips are down”.

    He went on to say that after Carter left the White House, Don Regan read him the laissez-faire Riot Act, saying “Whatever the Carter Administration gave to you, that’s it. Whether it helps or harms you, not one thing more, we don’t believe in this”.

  • Let’s not be churlish. That Lee Iacocca is going after Bush is a good thing. As for Karen’s comment, IIRC Chrysler did indeed receive help from the US Treasury. But the money was paid back early, in full.

  • There are a lot of people, many prominent, who would be characterized as “conservative” or at least Republican, who disagree with the president and the way he has handled the country, the economy, and the war.

    Virtually every Goldwater republican disagrees, many retired flag officers, businessmen, and even sitting United States Senators have also declared themselves fed up with the way the president and his entourage have acted. Some are upset for ideological reasons (small government), others becasue they think that the well studied common sense approach to the war was ignored for the flavor of the day, and others because GWB continues to run the country the way he ran all his businesses, into the ground.

    It is not surprising that Lee Ioccoca is saying what he says as it would be the opinion of my stauchly Reaganite father (if he was still alive) and any other successful businessman who does not suffer fools.

  • Are we to expect Dems to start acting like Repukes. When was the last time Dems started some bogus rumor or smear tactic on repukes. The reason we elected democrats is they don’;t act like repukes, doing anything to win up to and yes in most cases beyond being legal just to smear, distort, cheat, steal, lie for power and greed. We believed the repukes wouldn’t dare but now as we see, they did…over and over for past 12 yrs. How can we bring honor and integrity back to America which used to be a country of idealism and hope. Yes I’m outraged and mad as hell and trying to maintain some sense of integrity and honor in an atmosphere which really demands police action to remove this administration but perhaps the Democratic Congress has more tact and integrity than I do.Just how Mr. Iacocca do we ‘throw the bums out’ because at this point I’m willing to try anything?

  • Catherine,

    Are Democrats such wusses that we should dump them and back moderate Republicans who care about competency and the Constitution, because it’s not like the Democrats are showing they can do anything for us?

    In a word, No. We should not back moderate Republicans, because they vote in lockstep with the the rest of their GOP brethren. My preference would be that we nominate and then back competent, courageous Democrats, for example Wesley Clark.

    Having said that, I’d still rather have Democrats in charge even if they are “wusses” than have any one from the GOP in charge. The tribal mentality of the GOP negates any “moderate” tendencies.

  • “We should not back moderate Republicans, because they vote in lockstep with the the rest of their GOP brethren.” The epitome of being a wuss or a puss or a wimp or a chickenshit….

  • “A man of character does not ask a single soldier to die for a failed policy.”

    Which about sums it all up with Dumbya’s occupation of Iraq. Soldiers and civilians die everyday there because of his failed policy.

  • Re: #22 What got it for us was Republican news anchors who began to feel contempt for the Administration during Hurricane Katrina, with their contempt spreading to the public.
    What continues to get it for us are the cracks when Republicans show they’re no longer behind Bush.
    Are we going to have to recruit all of these Republicans into the Democratic party in order to have people with guts?
    –Comment by Catherine

    I guess I have to disagree with you on this one. I can hear your frustration in your very well written commentary, but you are engaging in some sweeping generalizations here which are not helpful.
    Certainly the incompetent and inappropriate way in which George Bush dealt with Katrina was was very dramatic and, because it was an “act of God” and by definition, out of control, the news whores were unable to spin it. That doesn’t make Anderson Cooper courageous or even remarkable, it just makes him a witness to corruption and incompetence.
    I think the public was already becoming aware of the problems of the Bush Administration, soon after the 2004 election when W said he was going to spend his “political capitol’ robbing Social Security. That PR disaster was quickly followed by Camp Casey which was followed by Katrina. With the exception of Keith Olberman, I can give the MSM absolutely no credit for courage.
    Josh Marshal at talkingpointsmemo is the person who caused some accountability in the debate to privatize Social Security. The news whores were far, far away.
    As Republicans jump ship, that does not make them brave, it makes them rats, fearing for their own skin.
    And as to people with guts, and who respect the constitution, well I’ll take Henry Waxman, Barbara Boxer, or Nancy Pelosi anytime over any of these last minute losers.

  • I find the Iacocca statements VERY significant. He’s the type of guy — corporate celebrity and all — that can make a dent in my father-in-law’s knee-jerk support for Bush. Listen, these guys like my F-i-L NEED the “permission” of an Iacocca to start bashing Bush. Remember that roughly half the voters voted for Bush — twice! By now, most of them would like to have that vote back. Consider also that guys like my F-i-L contribute money to campaigns, and not pocket change.

    But, alas, Iacocca is not washed in the Blood of the Left. May he rot in Texas. We don’t need no stinking allies!

  • “Congress responds to record deficits by passing a huge tax cut for the wealthy (thanks, but I don’t need it).” – Iacocca

    Right there is the money quote so to speak. Two angles:

    First, he does not need the book money. The book money is going to have exactly zero effect on his bottom line. I would imagine a man like that just wants to share his message/ideas rather then making a quick buck.

    Second, he is a major benefactor in the Bush economy and he is saying he has enough, his cup is full. Who else has this kind of courage and integrity to put country before bank account. No one this decade. Well maybe Buffet and the Gates, but not in the same way.

    He is someone we should embrace. He is a renown leader in business, someone powerful republicans look up to and he has something to say. People listen to this man.

    Not to be disrespectful, but few, if any powerful republicans give a rat’s ass what CB has to say, but Iacocca is a man who can influence people we could never reach, people who have real power.

    So he was bamboozled like a lot of people, but coming out against his own self-interest for the country is something that is rare and should not be dismissed.

  • England Discovers New Use For American Dollars

    London, England – The British have found a new and innovative use for the American dollar. With an approximate 0.47 exchange rate for the American dollar to the British pound sterling, American dollars have surged in popularity and are in great demand in England for sealing the cracks in the walls of windy old castles.

    Economists are also predicting that in 2008, when the reign of George the 43rd is finally over, the value of American currency will have plummeted to the point where it will be economically feasible to use stacks of American greenbacks as building blocks for ecologically designed compost bins.

  • Actually, my solution is simple, 4 more years and I am done with med school. I figure I can head for Europe just as the US begins to financially implode.

    Half my class is planning likewise. No one has any grandiose ideas that this will “fix” itself. I no longer believe that the country is viable in the slightest.

  • EPU’d during last attempt to post. Here it comes again! Dems are the big-tent folks, not to be confused with evangelicals. We welcome the formerly-demented and the prodigals. Iacocca probably will sell a lot of books, but let’s not be forgetting that his message is of immense value to the left. Y’all hear the sound of the White House of Cards collapsing?

  • I’m sorry, but as a Michigander who had to endure TV ad after TV ad of Iacocca pimping Dick DeVos for governor last year, the guy just doesn’t have any credibility for me. I’m glad he’s woken up to the reality of the Bush administration, but they why was he pressing so hard for DeVos, who is more theocratic than Bush himself, just 6 months ago?! Too little, too late.

  • Day by day Commander Blinky Bunnypants is cementing his place in history as The Worst American President of All Time. The Iacocca comments will add more cement.

    BTW if you know a businessman who supports Blinky, you can have some fun by asking him this question: “Sir, would you be willing to turn over the management of your company to George W. Bush for eight years?” Then watch him squirm.

  • “Donald Trump has been saying much the same thing as Iacocca.”

    Whatever else they may be they are smart guys, and they know an incompetent, arrogant arsewhole when they see one.

  • “Where was George Bush? He was reading a story about a pet goat to kids in Florida when he heard about the attacks.”

    Haven’t you heard? He didn’t want to upset the chilluns.

  • “I think the public was already becoming aware of the problems of the Bush Administration, soon after the 2004 election when W said he was going to spend his “political capitol’ robbing Social Security. That PR disaster was quickly followed by Camp Casey which was followed by Katrina.”

    True. Also don’t forget the Jack Abramoff lobbying scandals and the indictment of Tom DeLay, which, while not directly connected to the White House, did great damage to the general credibility and reputation of the RepugniCON Party.

    The Bushies and the RepugniCONs were overwhelmed by a perfect storm of disasters and scandals shortly after the 2004 election — which, of course, they had brought on themselves through their ignorance, arrogance, incompetence and dishonesty.

    File it under “chickenhawks coming home to roost.”

  • “don’t forget Iacocca was one of the original corporate welfare recipients.”

    That’s a totally unfair criticism. The so-called “Chrysler bailout” saved tens of thousands of American workers’ jobs, and the government got its money back with interest.

    To compare this with the piracy of Halliburton and KBR is absurd.

  • Kudos to one of the more honest and effective business mavens this country has produced. Good to see he hasn’t lost any of his edge.

  • I took Lee Iococca’s recent question “where’s the outrage” personally. Well Lee, I’m plenty outraged. My President is such a complete joke that the New York Times had a breaking headline ‘twelve minutes’ ago in which he renewed his call for a ‘Culture of Life.’ Meanwhile several inches of screen northward is the somber face of Iraqi lawmaker Nada Mohammed al-Jubouri in a neck-brace publicly discussing the horrific bombing in the green zone that killed one and wounded 22. I guess in President Bush’s highly flexible version of morality his plea makes sense; after you’ve tried to Shock and Awe a people into genuflection, why not throw them a bone and renew your noble call for a Culture of Life.

    By the way, just imagine what a disappointment in must be for the Iraqis after they learn that a literal translation of Culture of Life doesn’t capture the nuance of the Republican meaning of Culture of Life. How horrified would a Republican be – no, no, sweetheart, we still want all of you to die a fiery death, so sorry you misunderstood – the Culture of Life is about protecting innocent and holy blastocysts as they decay in freezers. But I’m being insensitive, here I am casting aspersions on all Republicans for the hypocrisy of putting undifferentiated cells above thousands of living humans when the polls indicate that only most Republicans hold these views (did you know that the ability to hold two contradictory thoughts in your mind in one moment is a sign of advanced thinking – Bravo!).

    Anyway Lee, am I starting to sound outraged yet? I haven’t even bit down on that rancid pork sandwich called corruption yet. But I guess I’m not really paying attention to Lee’s question – he’s not really asking “where’s the outrage,” he’s asking me why I’m sitting on my butt typing about my outrage instead of doing something.

    My answer is that in A People’s History of the United States Howard Zinn posits that the American elite does whatever it wants to amass power and fortune and buys off the rest of America from time to time when it gets too uppity. How much did I cost? Not much: a wife, home, job, annual vacation, and flat screen television.

    But what if we broke the deal. What if we really protested – and not that weekend protest crap – I mean Ghandhi, Martin Luther King kinds of protesting where you mean to be taken seriously. Are we even capable of that in this country anymore? Can we wake up and realize like David Cross said that the people in Iraq “fucked with us never.” That’s why there’s no outrage Lee. Those people in Iraq fucked with us never and we deliberately ignored that fact in exchange for more TVs and takeout dinners. There are too many people like me who are too afraid to call in to work and say, sorry but I’m off to D.C. to tell the President “no more in the name of America.” I am not hopeful but I hope to change.

  • Our leaders reflect the people in our country. We are not demanding real, strong leaders instead of politicians. Therefore the people will suffer in the long term. Look at the candidates for the next election. None of them are strong leaders but they are all strong politicians. We are in trouble. We need leaders who watch out for the long term best interest of this country, willing to sacrifice themselves for the best interest of the country, are intelligent, wise, hard working, studious, charasmatic, make quality decisions, analyse things carefully, etc. I don’t see myself voting any more but I may get involved in politics to seek out and encourage real leaders not politicians to run for office. Otherwise it is all down hill from here. I feel sorry for my grandchildren.

  • “It took me a number of years to fully understand why I had to make a good confession to a priest before I went to Holy Communion, but in my teens I began to appreciate the importance of this most misunderstood right of the Catholic Church. In later years, I found myself completely refreshed after confession. I even began to attend weekend retreats where the Jesuits in face-to-face examinations of conscience made me come to grips with how I was conducting my life. — Iacocca: An Autobiography, Bantam Books, p. 8.

    Roman Catholic Lee Iacocca, head of the Dearborn division of the Ford Motor Co. was the one who dispatched Carl Renas to get the limousine that had the evidence of multiple bullets that were shot from multiple guns that killed John F. Kennedy. Isn’t it amazing that many years later as President of Chrysler, Lee Iacocca went to Congress and asked for financial help? Since Catholic Iacocca had been such an obedient servant to his Jesuit masters, another obedient Catholic by the name of Thomas ‘Tip’ O’Neill used his power as Speaker of the House to get Lee Iacocca all the money he needed.”

    It is doubtfull that a Jesuit dilletant and Knight of Malta (knight of the Vatican) is supportive of anything akin to your freedom, and even less the Protestant ideals embodied in the Constitution and Bill of Rights. Those types of tyrants have no respect for the rule of law. Let the buyer of the message beware. His crowd (under Daddy Bush) did their level best to kill every nascent leader in the US in their day.

  • OK, enough. A little history lesson:
    Chrysler did not EVER get a “bailout” though many referred to it that way. What Chrysler got were loan guarantees–kind of like Uncle Sam co-signing the loan. The loan was paid back in full, with interest and ahead of schedule. I have a copy of the check.
    At the time I was on the team that handled all of the Chrysler advertising. When Iacocca took over Chrysler it was going south in a hurry. He turned it around with effective leadership and tremendous business savvy.
    We put him on the air doing Chrysler commercials and he was willing to put his credibility on the line and tie it to that of the company. It was a risky and gutsy move. What most people don’t know is that it wan’t his idea, and he had his doubts at first. Those ads gave him a high public profile, but what he was able to do to turn around Chrysler is what gave him his real credibility. I don’t think the man is a saint, but he sure is one smart guy, and I respect him very much.
    Iacocca took over Chrysler in 1979. Before that time, Detroit told America what to buy and America bought it. The price of gas was a non-issue.Yes, there were a gazillion gas guzzlers around then. All of the “big three” American automakers built and marketed them. There was a bigger profit margin for them on bigger cars.
    Then things changed, there was an energy crisis, and Detroit was caught with products that fewer and fewer American consumers wanted. So American consumers turned to Japan (and Europe to some degree) which already made more fuel-efficient cars because their gas had been expensive for years. Hence the rise of Honda and Toyota. It took many years for the American automakers to catch on that they didn’t set the rules anymore and start pumping out more fuel-efficient cars of their own. It also took them time to re-tool so they could build them.
    Fast forward to today–I live in southern California and it is SUV city out here. So as long as the American consumer is tripping over him/herself getting to the Hummer/Escalade/etc. showroom we sure can’t blame Ford/Chrysler/GM for taking it to the bank.

    I am glad that Iacocca is speaking out against the rabid monkeys in the Bush administration. I am glad that he is putting his credibility on the line once again. I don’t care if it is tied to a new book–if fact, if tha means he makes the rounds of talk shows and speaking engagements, then great!
    Hell, I recently saw John Dean (of Watergate fame) ot shilling his recent book and he has an audience among the left now because of what he is saying about Bush. Truth is truth. Whoever speaks it and gets the message out is worthy of support.
    Go Lee!

  • Bushco is just a symptom. Problem is money influence in US govt., and absence of a press independent of big money. In Canada, we knew Iraq war was a scam long before US did, because we have CBC, and some access to BBC. Was just CheneyCo mad ’cause Saddam signed development contracts with Russia’s Lukoil

    [A 1997 production-sharing agreement gave Russia’s LUKoil a 68.5 percent stake in the field (with 3.25 percent stakes each for compatriots Mashinoimport and Zarubezhneft). The agreement, which ran through 2020, envisaged investments of $6 billion into the field’s development. According to a report in “Kommersant” on 27 May, the contract would have brought the three Russian companies $70 billion worth of oil.]

    http://www.cdi.org/russia/260-11.cfm

    I’m really hoping you guys can find another Eisenhower fast, before your dollar implodes and takes us with it. Did you know that >5% of all shares on NYSE are owned by Saudi Royal family? They’ll only leave it there as long as $US is stable, and they must be getting nervous already. Did you know that Indonesia’s currency dropped from 2,500 / $ to 19.500 / $ in just a short time in 1990’s? Couldn’t happen here? We can hope, I guess. I do wish you’d get the money influence out of your politics, and some independence in press.

    Hoping not to offend anyone…… Best of luck.

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  • IIacocca is having a temper tantrum. He supported Kerry and those CEO’s can’t stand not having it their way. Iacocca couldn’t buy the presidency 4 Kerry and so to get even, he has to go into a power rant. Get over it you all……YOU LOST!!!!! And you will lose again, unless your party can come up with worthwhile ideas and formulate an idealogy beyond “Bush lied ….troops died” How sophmoric is that!!! Come on just spit out a platform the American people can buy into and stop all the other rhetoric. It didn’t stop the Republicans in 04 and it won’t in 08. Here is what the Democrats believe. DO YOU?…if so shout it out:
    1.) Higher taxes for everyone. Tax anything and everything.
    2) Death for unwanted fetuses….and for full term partially born babies.
    3) More government programs…more give aways…more welfare and freebies. Less incentives to go out and make it on own.
    4) Peace by talking. If we had only known sooner who those trade center bombing terrorists were, we could have talked them out of hurting us. Same with Hitler and Stalin.
    5) Gay marriage. No American traditions. Do away with an institution that is thousands of years old.
    6) Retreat rather than risk winning wars. Raise the white flag and flee.
    7) Down with Corporations….those very businesses that hire 70% of our work force.
    8) Green…..But only for the other guy. Put up wind power, but not by Ted Kennedy’s compound or Al Gore’s. That 8 bedroom mansion wouldn’t look so nice with those wind mills out there.
    9) Judges who legislate from the bench. Make it up as they go along. No strick constructionists….believe it is a living document that grows and changes.
    10) Public education: teach sex to kindergardeners, how to wear a condom to 5th graders, but heaven help us if a prayer is muttered or anything good is said about our country. We democrats hate that.

    These are just 10 ideologies of the Democratic party. If you believe, then get out there and elect your guy. Or better yet that hawk…Hillary Clinton. Now there’s a creative communicator

  • Whoa…..all this Bush bashing and hand wringing and other ca-ca may make you feel good, but go back and read the article. Iococca certainly gives the President some well deserved licks, but I read the article as much more comprehensive. It’s the “same circus, new clowns” approach to Washington. Those who are currently there are the problem and the whole lot of them, regardless of party labels, ought to be shown the door. You could replace them with a the elected leaders from the high school Boy’s and Girl’s State programs and have better results.
    We need an “Operation Clean-Sweep” and completely replace the current members of the House and Senate with new faces, new ideas and less obligations to lobbists and past money. While we’re at it, how about this?
    No pensions for selected officials or there staff. When a member of Congress receives over a 100K a year for a single term, something’s wrong.
    Rant and rave all you like about GWB, but he “ain’t the problem”. We need a tidalwave of change and it can start with
    something like Iocacca’s article.

  • Oh please.
    Iraq is not about oil. Our biggest suppliers are right here: Canada and Mexico. However, Venezuela is in our top ten suppliers…interesting

    If any *smart* dem bothered to look it up– its right there to be found.

    Iraq is about 1. removing an evil man from power, and 2. keeping terrorists there protecting their “holy land” rather than waiting for them to come here and blow up your kindergardener’s school. Of course, liberals will be more than ready to decry such a tragedy with you and ask “why wasn’t something done to prevent it?”

    3. It’s a volunteer army. Anyone can say no and go home.

    4. If Kerry or Gore were as smart or as capable as any of you think, they’d have won. They didn’t. They weren’t, and Gore has more than proven this since then with his ecogaffs.

    5. Where was this diatribe when it could have mattered? All it can do now is sell a book to a bunch of arm chair do nothing wannabe rebels.

    “Real change comes from talk?’ Nooo, it comes from action, which we are seeing in Iraq. I’ve never yet seen a widesweeping government change that did not come without violence, not one. Canada can thank us for doing the hard part for them.

    A plan to get out? Easy, we leave when the job is done. Did you know there were Americans fighting insurgents in Germany 50 years after the fact? Should we have left that alone, too?

    anyone ready for a real discussion? same name at hotmail.

  • We could use lots and lots of television ads informing America that voting for someone who only says what you want to hear does not work! We need integrity and honesty. It IS time to make some rough choices. I hope Lee Iacocca will get that ball rolling. He is clear, concise and logical.
    Does anyone know how to email him?

  • The only pony Bush has in this conflict is his legacy. Not about oil. Not about terrorism. And sorry my Kool-Aid drinking friend WynniFitz, not about removing an evil man from power. The initial choices this president made thinking that his Lord was guiding him, and in his heart he knows he’s right, and that history would prove him right, were wrong choices. Sticking with these catastrophic wrong choices doesn’t magically make them right choices. However, if he can keep the carnage going until he leaves office, then it isn’t his problem. Mission accomplished, right? Is it? How many more lost lives are acceptable to you? Another five-thousand troops and fifty-thousand Iraqis? Maybe ten-thousand and a hundred thou? Wake the hell up America!

  • Lee claims he wants to light a fire – – – I didn’t need the book – – –

    Where Have all the Leaders Gone? Let’s see – – –

    Encourage massive debt, and hobble public education with so much inane bureaucracy that it is virtually impossible to create a new generation of intelligent, civic-minded leaders. Replace reading, writing and arithmetic with “Gina has two Mommies”, Environmental Issues for the next Decade, and Ebonics.

    It stands to reason that if a million people live in a country that promotes excellence, and they compete with 100 people in a country that promotes mediocrity, the odds of creating leaders are better in the country that promotes excellence.

    Leaders are spawned in the crucible of hunger and sacrifice. We cooked our last batch in WWII, Lee. The next batch speaks multiple languages; English, French, Spanish – – – but the mother tongue is Mandarin.

  • I think it is a huge step in the right direction to question our leaders, be it harsh, stinging, challenging, bordering on abusive, or what have you… they are leaders for a reason. Leaders are responsible for LEADING, not creating soundbites, kissing babies, reading copy while speaking and posturing. And, anyone who ran for public office, worked to get elected, grandstanded on any of the slogans in the past decades to be our leaders, gotten elected only to show up to work 27% of the time and folds up like a worn-out shoe to these difficult questions are part of the problems we are facing, They need a good @$$ chewing. And a new place in life.

    I know a few folks who voted for Bush jr. the first time and didn’t the second term. I can’t believe anyone would’ve voted for him either time, but that’s just opinion. Hard questions demand solid, honest answers, and no one of influence except for Mr. Iacocca has had the courage and the patriotism to stand and do exactly that.

    Folks, get a grip. This is not a good time for our country for many reasons, some of it because of global issues and terrorism. But sad excuses for leaders is some of our biggest deficits and problems, if not the biggest. Wake up and do some research before you vote, and by all means VOTE! Lazy @$$, apathetic members of our society are also to blame for the ill-equipped and ill-meaning employees who are running our country, making laws and passing amendments.

    I sincerely and whole-heartedly applaud Mr. Iacocca for writing this book. I appreciate someone with the courage and sense of urgency, who steps up to the plate as if it is his call of duty no matter the fall out and even if it is against someone he voted for and then changed his position due to dissatisfaction, and against the party to which he has somewhat been affiliated. He also did it to try and light a fire under some of our lazy, greedy, apathetic, selfish tails. He did the tough thing and put his character and reputation out there and did what he felt was needed, and he didn’t have to do any of it. He sure isn’t getting any favoritism from the DC sloths or other political mish-mash. No one else is doing it, not the movers and shakers nor the average Amercan.

    Let’s ask tough questions and demand honest answers. That’s our job. We need to ask these tough questions and demand honest answers from the leaders, and maybe even more importantly of ourselves. To be calm, submissive and totally party-line loyal while things are getting worse is almost the same as being led by the nose ring to the slaughter house.

    That’s what it could feel like if we are not careful and become more honest and responsible.

  • Im a 20 year old girl from India. I read your autobiography very recently. I’m in awe with your personality. Truly inspiring!! After reading your book, i have realised that nothing is impossible if one is determined. As a student i have realized how important communication skills are.

  • Hey Iococca!

    Ever heard of Ron Paul?

    Well, neither have most Americans I guess. Each time I mention him the response is, Ron who?

    He definitely mirrors your views about big business, banking cartels, and our government’s role in supporting their interests, not ours!

    We have to take back this country…we have to keep from having our U.S. Constitution used as a wiping rag by foreign interest groups only interested in bringing down this country. We were once considered a “superpower” and we’re getting ready to topple quicker than the twin towers did.

    Wake up America…wake up Americans…before it’s too late! Demand that leaders like Ron Paul take the center stage in the oval office and set the country back on the path to prosperity, peace and proliferation once again. We can be a production society again…we can learn from our mistakes…give us a try Americans…VOTE RON PAUL in 2008…or you may never have a chance at a popular vote again! Show the world we are not pulled by the ring in our noses by the fear instilled in us by mainstream media, the banking cartels, the drug cartels and foreign business interests.

    WE CAN BE A STRONG COUNTRY AGAIN, BUT YOU WILL HAVE TO MAKE THAT HAPPEN…DON’T DEPEND ON YOUR NEIGHBOR TO DO IT FOR YOU…DON’T DEPEND ON YOUR CHILDREN DOING THAT FOR YOU…PULL YOURSELVES AWAY FROM YOUR TV’S AND STAND IN THE STREETS IF THAT’S WHAT IT TAKES AND SHOUT OUT LOUD….

    I’M MADE AS HELL…AND I’M NOT GONNA TAKE IT ANYMORE!!!!!! (Network, 1976….Americans, 2008)

  • America’s problems started long before Bush, and history will tell if the war in Iraq and Afghanistan were worth the price.

    A good example of one of the problems is Social Security, and Bush sees it and even attempted to reconcile it. Our Congress (both Republican and Democrat) have been stealing the monies from it for years and before it is all over it will go insolvent or the young people of today will end up giving another huge percentage of their income to fund it. Medicare and Medicade are time bombs too and will increasingly eat away at the budgets requiring a more taxes. With our governments record on running programs, we will be in even greater trouble should the take over the health care system.

    Tax revenues have been at an all time high the past few years and it would have been a great time to cut spending and seriously work on the deficit. Though as usual our country does not have a tax problem, it is a spending one and Congress will not forsake their ways on that (either side of the aisle).

    Obama uses the cute little phrase that he wants change, and maybe it is time for America to dabble into socialism which is what he means by it. All one has to do is look at the always slow to no growth and double digit unemployment rates in Europe to see our future. Of course that will be just more people for the government to subsidise which is exactly what they want. The American dream will become the European one; none at all.

  • “Term Limits”
    We need to keep the “Tree of Liberty Refreshed.”
    I say no more life terms. In doing so we will help reduce the mess we find ourselves in. Who in Washington decides which law’s we obey and which ones to ignore? With 24 million illegals and our great leaders in Washington dont even follow the Constitution and defend our borders! Corruption to the core!
    How can so few people keep us from becoming energy independent? They would rather save a bear/owl and let a solder die. Enough already!
    It most certainly is time for a revolution!
    “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of “PATRIOTS” and tyrants” Thomas Jefferson.
    Where can we find such a leader today?
    He wont be found with the so called mainstream media!

  • Bah, iococca is just following in the footsteps of his conservatard buddies. They messed up everything that was good in this country, and now they pretend to be “outraged” in order to cover up their own incompetence. I agree with him, though. Throw the bums out, including clueless twits like Iococca who worked so hard in the past to get us into this situation.

  • I am sure someone who has lived his life well, and maybe even struggled to do it, the happenings in today’s world are a bit upsetting. But then again – is he the best person for political commentary? I loved his autobio. but probably I will not buy this book.

  • Thanks Mr Iacocca ! I read your book and WOW wish I could have had the credit for putting everything so nicely ! I wish EVERYONE could read this book and STOP and THINK because EVERYTHING about your 9 “C’s” is common sense ! I even e-mailed the Clinton campaign and asked them to have Hillary STOP and read this book ??? I believe no matter Republican/Democratic/Neutral you MUST stop and think this through. Americans have to take back AMERICA and that would be US the VOTERS !!

  • Iam all for stoping the fat rat race in washington, if we dont get a hold on our gov.right now we can kiss this country goodby.If you all dont believe what lee is saying above then your as unamerican as one could be. how do we get the senseless spending out of the gov. hands. how do the poeple take the money from them. If we could get one dollar from each an every person weekly we would have hundreds of millions to fight with, lets do something.cause these jokers runing for pres.right now are going to bury us.

  • I haven’t read the book yet, but the excerpts have set me on fire.Problems are, as good as they are, they are just words…and as usual, we have the lesser of two evils to vote for.The leader of our world now is the DOLLAR, seconded by politics…not that this is new, just that they have become stronger and stronger over the years until now, I’m afraid that they have become too strong to beat……we have allowed the monsters (race,immigration, large corporations,gun control), to name a few to get so powerful that they may destroy us all. If a “good,powerful”,leader with ideas like Iacocca had the desire and unfortunately the financing to run, would he have enough to beat the money and liberals in this country to win? I doubt it.The whole system needs overhauling from the bottom up completely.

  • I just heard about these statements and this book today on a Miami radio station.

    People with Iococca’s name recognition are sorely needed in this fight against the status quo. Who cares about his past choices? Face it, 99% of this country is getting screwed by the other 1%. We should all be grateful for the words of someone with Lee’s name recognition and experiences.

  • AMEN, there SHOULD be outrage. But then what? I have an idea! How best to describe it then in story form: A melded social structure THAT WORKS by incorporating ALL the fundamentals like, the Golden Rule. You only have to read chapter 1 to get the idea. No homeless, no one hungry, everybody has a responsibility and counselor.

    If you like it, Mr. Iacocca, I would be honored for you to be the spokesperson. I am a recluse (or I couldn’t have written it) so I am much too shy. If you do not like it (you will), I will enclose return postage. Just tell me where to send the plan for what to do next.

  • I’m new to this site. But I’ll be coming back. The strangest thing is how unafraid the politicians are in this country. Absolute power corrupts absolutley. But at what point is the constituency held accountable for…well…not holding the politicians accountable. Aren’t the problems and problem “causers” obvious? Or are we so divided and distracted that it doesn’t matter anymore? Just thinking out loud.
    -d

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