As GM goes, so goes the nation. It may seem like that is all too true right now, but it's not.
General Motors (NYSE: GM) has been a slow-motion train wreck for a generation.
Former CEO Roger Smith blew hundreds of billions in automation that forgot about workers and did not work. The company received import protection and a waiver of regulations from Uncle Sam to generate huge profits in SUVs, and it reinvested the money in excessive contractual obligations to already coddled workers currently earning in excess of $70 an hour.
And Ford (NYSE: F) and Chrysler were not too far behind.
Congress is now debating some form of bailout in addition to the $25 billion for re-tooling. The structure and future of this bailout is uncertain and, while I'm in the minority, I see nothing happening pre-Obama except a possible GM bankruptcy filing.
Many middle-of-the-road Americans, including many day-to-day Democrats and independents, want to see GM go through a prepackaged bankruptcy.
And why is that?

Detroit is lobbying very hard for government assistance. Claiming severe hardship, the Big Three automakers -- 

