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To: Pippin
"...... I really would appreciate everyone's prayers. I love my mom, she has been a rock in our family"

Mothers are like that. :) I've always felt the person who first labeled women the weaker sex must not have known many women. The indominable spirit your mother continues to show in the face of such a daunting challenge is a testimony to her strength. Please know that she and your family will be in my prayers.

210 posted on 11/02/2009 8:51:11 AM PST by Darlin' (Stay well or the government will try to kill you.)
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To: Letitring; catpuppy; Mo1; Lakeshark; sweetliberty; Servant of the 9; grannie9; ...
ummmm.... I'm trying to remember which U.S. car company decided it was not in their best interest to sell out to government handouts.... Oh, yes, it was Ford Motor Company.

Ford surprises with $1B profit; sees profit in '11

Ford, the only Detroit automaker to dodge direct government aid and bankruptcy court, surprised investors with net income of nearly $1 billion in the third quarter and forecast a "solidly profitable" 2011. The automaker says earnings were fueled by U.S. market-share gains, cost cuts and the "Cash for Clunkers program," which drew flocks of buyers to showrooms this summer. The latest results signal that Ford's turnaround is on more solid ground. The company lost more than $14.6 billion last year and hasn't posted a full-year profit since 2005. While it made a profit in the second quarter, that was mainly due to debt reductions that cut its interest payments. Dearborn, Mich.-based Ford reported third-quarter net income of $997 million, or 29 cents per share. Previously, the automaker said it would break even or better. Its key North American car and truck division posted a pretax profit of $357 million, the company's first quarter in the black since early 2005. Ford cited higher pricing, lower material costs and increased market share for the improvement. Excluding one-time items, Ford earned 26 cents per share, blowing away analysts' expectations of a loss of 12 cents

If those U.S. car manufacturers who weren't profitable in a good economy why on earth would any rational person expect them to turn it around in the current economy?

213 posted on 11/02/2009 10:34:30 AM PST by Darlin' (Stay well or the government will try to kill you.)
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