RIP: Hummer, Saturn, Pontiac, and Mercury.

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If there’s one constant in this world, it’s this: We live in a world of constant flux. In the automotive world, however, we’ve all grown accustomed to seeing the same group of manufacturers introduce new models each year. You know the names. But for the 2011 model year—thanks largely to the huge economic downturn that began in late 2008—four well-known American nameplates have gone the way of the Edsel, so to speak.


Of these four, the Hummer brand was the most short-lived. The original Hummer H1 (or Hum-Vee) was a celebrity of the Persian Gulf War. In 2002 came a smaller and (slightly) more manageable version, the Hummer H2. Exactly what made suburbanites decide they needed a four-wheeled facsimile of a machine-gun toting, troop-hauling war machine parked in their driveway is best left to future generations to explain. Perhaps the supersized and fuel-guzzling excess of the Hummer brand will someday look as quaint as towering tailfins from the late-1950s? Or perhaps not.


Pontiac and Mercury always maintained a far more balanced product portfolio during their much longer life-spans. Founded in 1939, Pontiac was introduced as a companion make to prop up sales at GM’s Oakland division. Pontiac immediately outsold, and eventually far outlived, its parent brand. Oakland faded away in 1931. Pontiac’s historical highlights include the 1964 Pontiac GTO (the car that defined the muscle-car era) and the Firebird sports coupe.


Mercury was introduced in 1939, not to boost another brand’s sales, but to fill the price gap that had emerged between Ford and its upscale sibling, Lincoln. Cars like the 1949 Mercury Coupe driven by James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause all but guarantees the brand immortality – even if the nameplate itself has finally driven into the sunset. Years of badge engineering eventually dissolved Mercury’s identity, squeezing the brand out of the Ford Motor Company family tree.


Perhaps the biggest surprise – at least in terms of positive automotive karma – is the loss of Saturn. Created by GM to take the fight to imports, Saturn was marketed as “a different kind of car company,” thanks to a lineup of fuel-sipping small cars and no-haggle pricing policy. If only the cars lived up to the feel good dealership experience. A lack of development and new models left Saturn spinning out of orbit. A list ditch effort to market vehicles built by GM’s German-based Opel division as Saturns proved too little too late.
 

I'll be in the Bar..With my head on the Bar
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Add Buick, Oldsmobile and Cadililac to the list and hell while ur at it add just about every American owned and non union operated buisness to the list.

The 1st step you see in removing all property rights starts with buisnesses and then moves right on into landowned by Free men.

Short history lesson....Anybody remember all the uproar when bill clinton declared millions of acres "Federal Land" and banned their use for any purpose.
Does anybody remember the uproar when GWB sent the National Debt through the ceiling and we had the largest budget in history???????

Well already Obama has TRIPLED the lands seized by Clinton....He has TRIPLED the National Debt.......Wait it gets better.....And as of this very minute and the rest of this year for the 1st time in the history of this country....WE HAVE NO BUDGET AT ALL!!!!!!!!!!!!! NONE ZERO NADA. Pelosis House never even made a budget for this quarter cus they knew it would be a waste of paper....They are going to spend EVERY G.D. DIME they can get their Guillotine bound hands on............
 

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With the return of the muscle and pony cars I would have loved to see the return of the GTO, Trans Am and Firebird.
 

Conservatives, Patriots & Huskies return to glory
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when the economy turns, this opens the door for a new brand to surface

when one door closes, another opens
 

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Pontiac were the biggest piece of shit cars ever made.

Pretty much.
The best muscle car was the GTO, and one of the greatest of all time.
Their best seller was the Grand AM.
One of the most popular was the Firebird.

But yeah, 80 percent of the Pontiac line was horse crap.
 

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