Cafe Hayek
has something you'll want to be seated to read (put it this
way: even NPR was taken aback). Seated, that is, preferably not
in one of those museum-bound vehicles as you have come to know
them:
In
this NPR interview, Lisa Jackson, head of the EPA, gives
her perspective (and her boss's) on the auto industry (HT: TJ
Goss). In the second quote from her, I have tried to reproduce
the sounds she makes in trying to avoid telling a ridiculous
lie. She tells it anyway. From the 3:35 mark of the interview:
Jackson: The President has said-and I couldn't agree more-that
what this country needs is one single national road map that
tells auto makers who are trying to become solvent again, what
kind of car it is they need to be designing and building for
the American people.
NPR reporter (interrupting): Is that the role of the
government. though? I mean that doesn't sound like free
enterprise.
Jackson: Well, ih it , it is free enterprise in a way. Umm uhh
you know, first and foremost the free enterprise system has us
where we are right this second (laughs) and so some would argue
that the government already has a much larger role than we
might have when Henry Ford rolled the first cars off the
assembly line.
Trabant meets Obama...the TraBama 2010, brought to you by the
EBA, the Everything's our Business Agency.