Wednesday, December 12, 2018

truckin' got my car turned in...













GM and Ford have announced they are getting out of the car business.  Although they sell hundreds of thousands of these vehicles each year, somehow they are not desired by the public, passed over by SUV owners, or too expensive to produce, per GM.  After May of next year, such iconic names as Taurus, Impala, and some Cadillac models will be gone.  It seems 75% of the vehicles sold are trucks, with the market for cars shrinking.  It seems that Ford has chosen to be smart and is keeping the Mustang, but an SUV model is rumored.  A Mustang with a usable back seat?  Also no word on the Camaro, although its sales are dipping too.  No word from FIAT who owns Chrysler and is selling all the Jeeps it can make and is bringing out its own small truck in the spring, as is Ford, bringing back the Ranger.  Even my wife the Mustang convertible driver said if looking for a new car, er vehicle, would want to sit up, but won’t give up her Mustang.  So maybe a hint for you car owners, think ahead, in 20 years your sedan of today will be collectible for no other reason than they don’t make them anymore.  How will you explain to your grandkids you used to drive a car once?  “Grandpa, what’s a trunk?  They really had one of those?”  Are we witnessing the ending of our horse and buggy era? 
But still want a car, with a trunk to hide things, Toyota and Honda have assured you they are staying in the car business.  “Oh what a feeling” may only come from across the pond anymore, as American made will mean trucks and foreign cars. Now I have had a few trucks in my time, for cutting wood, and what motorcycle owner can do without one, but still like a car.  Maybe showing my age or ignorance, pulling up in a sports car on convertible on a warm summer night, top down, and V-8 growling, gets my attention.  Trucks are still a truck to me, but then I ride motorcycles, and cannot fit any of my bikes in the trunk of the Mustang.  So without being practical or agreeing to disagree, we need cars.  They are our heritage, our history, and I hope still in my future.  But maybe some names may give you an insight as to who they are, as opposed to what they are.
Harley Davidson, Ford, and even GM are all Motor companies, says so right in their names.  Ford Motor Company, General Motors, and the Motor Company.  They just make forms of transportation, and at the heart of it all I quote Alfred P. Sloan, who was the architect of GM, and its CEO and President in its heyday.  “GM is not in the business of making cars, but in the business of making money.”  And there you have it.  Finally, it is all about the money, and if they can make more money on trucks, you get trucks.  When looking your choice is what is on the lot, and trucks it is.  Go to a Toyota store, it’s car, then trucks.  Same with Honda.  Looking for an economy car, for our economical needs....start thinking used.  So much for Henry Ford who said “it is a poor company that makes only money.”  But poor companies don’t make it.....
So as we are encouraged to jump on the truck bandwagon, it is harder to tell the brand apart.  They all begin to look alike, with exceptions like the Raptor, that sell for $20-30 thousand over list, no dickering, or the short wheelbase work truck.  Shopping for a four door, look at a new sedan truck.  With one thing missing, the trunk.  Oops, and the don’t fit in the garage, too tall.  Which in So Cal doesn’t matter, no one uses their garage for cars anymore except me.  You ought to hear the comments....another anachronism right before our very eyes.  So vehicles choices soon will not include cars, only in religion will we find more choices....
There was a time when it was either Gentile or Jew.  With no other choices.  Then religion came along, using the word Christian to describe it, and it was either Catholic or Protestant.  But today with dozens of denominations reaching out with their version of God, in too many cases he is not available.  Churches have become a place to make a political or social statement, neglecting Jesus.  It is hard to go by a strip mall without some new fellowship popping up, promising to do it better that those that came before, as they pass the collection plate.  Seems some things are just to hard to give up.  But how God sees things is more telling, and his truth will set you free, if you let him.  God loves us all equally, while still sinners he sent Jesus to die for us, but he sees us as saved or unsaved.  No middle of the road.  In him you get everything, in religion you only get what they offer.  So why is it so hard to make the right choice? 
Jesus came to separate the sheep from the goats.  Not to unite us with each other, but to reunite us with God in heaven.  As I get the bulletins via email, most asking for money, some advertising selling trees, or other holiday goodies, I wonder where Jesus is?  But then remember he is at the right hand of God, the most favored position, but he left his spirit, who is readily denied.  But with the only power and ability to reunite us.  The Bible tells of a day when the lion will sit down with the lamb, we get the Lions playing the Rams.  But Jesus tells us churches are to be judged, as are the individuals in them.  It will not be what the market bears, but who Jesus is and who they choose to serve.  You may live and breath a religion, a denomination, or even a belief, only knowing Jesus will get you to heaven.  Yet in a market driven economy, how popular is it to be a Christian?
AAA may tow your car, the dealer may honor a warranty, but who will you honor and honor you on judgment day?  Cars change, who would have thought driving a truck would be fashionable?  Not June Cleaver, who had a fit her boys rode in one.  Is what you drive more important than whom you believe in?  Consider Jesus today, there was a time when there was no substitute for cubic inches, or no replacement for displacement.  But there has never been a replacement for Jesus.  He is the still the way, no matter what you drive or the size of your payment.  Forgiveness never goes out of style, or does mercy and grace.  The only choice we don’t have is that we will all take our last ride in the same vehicle, a hearse.  But who is behind the wheel and where it is going will make all the difference. Who drives you makes all the difference.  And no, the disciples were all in one accord, not stuffed into one!  With apologies to the Grateful Dead, “truckin’, got my chips cashed in...” 
love with compassion,
Mike
matthew25biker.blogspot.com