Yes, would you like me to name a few? George Soros... Warren Buffett... Bill Gates... etc.
Even the most average CEO understands you have to butter both sides of the political bread in the USA...
Allow me to be more direct then.
To which socialist parties did those named millionaires donate?
And Chrysler lost $14B...
Further still, Chrysler was sold.
Again.
Protectionism is a very socialist thing to do,
Then I guess the United States and Europe were very socialist during the golden age of capitalism.
The protection of domestic industry from foreign competitors was a unviersal practice in the nineteenth century. It was what allowed the United States, Great Britain, and Germany to become world-class competitors. For example, the
Corn Laws, and the massive tariffs on imported goods that continued in Britain up to 1906, and in the United States until
1950.
Some countries such as a Japan, that often-held-on-high paragon of the success of capitalism, continues to practice economic protectionism. Just try buying an American car in Tokyo!
Even in the United States today, there is the
de facto economic protectionism practiced through agricultural subsidies (illegal via a multitude of international laws and treaties which the US has signed) and anti-dumping legislation.
Other protections, such as copyright and international patent systems can also be thought of as economic protectionism, as can the manipulation of currency exchange rates. But get this: all of these things help to increase the prosperity of individual nations, and neither the British Empire in its heyday, nor the US in the last hundred years, could have become what they did without extensive protectionism.
The only reason we support it today is because we want other nations to adopt free-trade policies, countries which don't have industrial sectors capable of competing with ours, so that we can dominate them and come to own them. If we were really interested in all that "comparative advantage" stuff, we would take the advice of renowned economist Joseph Stiglitz in
Making Globalization Work and make our free-trade deals only with Europe and fully developed nations, providing generous terms towards lesser developed nations to help them rise to parity with us.
But we won't, because our interest is not in raising up the rest of the world to our level.
and doesn't help things get better, generally speaking.
Actually, it is what makes industrialization possible.
http://internationalecon.com/Trade/Tch100/T100-4.php