that's exactly why i thought motown was a better choice of logo appropriation!

On Tue, Feb 26, 2008 at 3:26 PM, Fred Heutte <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I think the design is fine, although the GM reference raises
>  a number of problematic associations concerning the
>  company's relationship to Detroit (not to mention balance
>  sheet, market share, offshoring, the lamea$$ comments by
>  Bob Lutz about global warming, etc.).
>
>  But hey, when you're talking about anything Detroit related,
>  it's all about ambiguity and contradictions.
>
>  So yeah, Martin's gotten us the postmodern 313 t-shirt
>  design :)
>
>  fh
>
>
>  -----------------
>
>  GM exec stands by calling global warming a 'crock'
>
>  Fri Feb 22, 2008 3:04pm EST
>
>  (Editor's Note: This story contains language in paragraph 1 that may
>  be offensive to some readers)
>
>  DETROIT, Feb 22 (Reuters) - General Motors Corp (GM.N: Quote,
>  Profile, Research) Vice Chairman Bob Lutz has defended remarks he
>  made dismissing global warming as a "total crock of sh1t," saying
>  his views had no bearing on GM's commitment to build environmentally
>  friendly vehicles.
>
>  Lutz, GM's outspoken product development chief, has been under fire
>  from Internet bloggers since last month when he was quoted as making
>  the remark to reporters in Texas.
>
>  In a posting on his GM blog on Thursday, Lutz said those "spewing
>  virtual vitriol" at him for minimizing the threat of climate change
>  were "missing the big picture."
>
>  "What they should be doing in earnest is forming opinions, not about
>  me but about GM and what this company is doing that is ... hugely
>  beneficial to the causes they so enthusiastically claim to support,"
>  he said in a posting titled, "Talk About a Crock."
>
>  GM, the largest U.S. automaker by sales and market share, has been
>  trying to change its image after taking years of heat for relying
>  too much on sales of large sport-utility vehicles like the Hummer
>  and not moving faster on fuel-saving hybrid technology.
>
>  "My thoughts on what has or hasn't been the cause of climate change
>  have nothing to do with the decisions I make to advance the cause of
>  General Motors," he wrote.
>
>  Lutz said GM was continuing development of the battery-powered,
>  plug-in Chevy Volt and other alternatives to traditional internal
>  combustion engines.
>
>  GM is racing against Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T: Quote, Profile,
>  Research)(TM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) to be first to market a
>  plug-in hybrid car that can be recharged at a standard electric
>  outlet.
>
>  Lutz has previously said GM made a mistake by allowing Toyota to
>  seize "the mantle of green respectability and technology leadership"
>  with its market-leading Prius hybrid.
>
>  A 40-year auto industry veteran who joined GM earlier in the decade
>  with a mandate to shake up its vehicle line-up, Lutz is no stranger
>  to controversy.
>
>  As part of a campaign against higher fuel economy standards, Lutz
>  wrote in a 2006 blog posting that forcing automakers to sell smaller
>  cars would be "like trying to address the obesity problem in this
>  country by forcing clothing manufacturers to sell smaller, tighter
>  sizes."
>
>  Automakers ended their opposition to higher fuel standards in 2007
>  when it became clear that proposed changes would become law with or
>  without their support.
>
>  In December, U.S. President George W. Bush signed a law mandating a
>  40 percent increase in fleetwide fuel economy by 2020, the first
>  substantial change in three decades. (Reporting by Kevin Krolicki,
>  editing by Toni Reinhold)
>
>
>



-- 
peace,

frank

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