WhatFinger

What's good for GM, Is Good for America," so I have decided to simply follow your lead!

Holiday Greetings to Citigroup and General Motors



-Satire- Greetings and best wishes for a joyful and bountiful holiday season, my Fellow Americans!

Holiday Greetings to Citigroup and General Motors To those at Citigroup, to whom I am obligated to pay $300 a month for the rest of my life, congratulations on that $20 billion bail out from your pals at the U.S. Treasury. Please pay no attention to the naysayers who oppose your good fortune. After all, this is the season of miracles and whom is more deserving of a virgin birth sort of blessing than the good folks at Citigroup? In keeping with the spirit of the season, my purpose in writing is to advise you that I will no longer be able to make my monthly payment on Citigroup account 2008SCREWUSAxxxx, effective immediately. As you are obviously aware, times are tough and I have not been as prudent with my finances as I should have been. I am sure that you understand where that can lead. Under normal circumstances, I would feel embarrassed and even humiliated at defaulting on my obligations. I might even apologize. However, since that $20 billion bailout you co-opted from Henry Paulson includes my hard earned tax dollars, to my way of thinking Citigroup can take that $30,000 I owe out of the check that Hank is sending! As far as I am concerned, we will then be "even." By the way, I understand that the $20 billion is really a "loan" that will have to be re-paid. I trust that your pal Henry is charging you 25 percent annual interest, just like Citigroup does to hard-working Americans? On to my friends at General Motors and the dudes that sold me that loaded 2009 SUV Acadia which I was allowed to "steal" for $55,000. Great vehicle that, and now that the oil market has collapsed, three miles per gallon is not all that bad. In fact, with gasoline now available for around $2.82 a gallon, I could almost afford the monthly payments, the first of which is due next week, were it not for the $65 per hour labor that my GM dealer charges to change the oil. In addition, Governor Schwarzenegger and the other vipers in the California assembly are going to triple the annual registration fee for SUVs like my precious Acadia! It's all too much, GM buddies! After due deliberation, including consideration of bankruptcy, I have decided to default on my payments, beginning with # 1, because GM is not going to be bailed out by the government and is sure to fail. Given the fact that GM is in deep do-do and will probably not be in business when Barack Obama makes history on January 20, sending GM even the first payment would be a classic example of "good money chasing bad," so I won't! By the way, I decided against filing for bankruptcy after hearing GM executives argue against that option for GM itself. Thank you for the great advice. As they say, "What's good for GM, Is Good for America," so I have decided to simply follow your lead! To Citigroup and GM, Happy Holidays and may prosperity find your sorry butts in 2009! John W. Lillpop

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John Lillpop——

John W. Lillpop is a recovering liberal. “Clean and sober” since 1992 when last he voted for a Democrat. For years, John lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, the very liberal sanctuary city which protects, rather than prosecutes, certain favored criminals.  John escaped the Bay Area in May and now lives in Pine Grove California where conservative values are still in vogue.

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