reply to post by MikeNice81
Not disputing what you're saying at all.....I'm just going on my own experience.
American cars I've owned were pieces of crap.
Japanese cars I've owned have been reliable.
No amount of news coverage will change my experiences. Does that mean I'll NEVER buy American again? No. It just means I want to hear REAL reports
from REAL Americans on certain makes and models before I dish out $20,000 to $30,000 (or more) on a car that I plan to keep for many years.
Unlike most people, when I shop for a car, I talk to people I know. I know who they are, they aren't "faceless", and their opinions matter to me.
I know they won't lie. I canvass as many friends and family as I can, and I listen for repeating statements, repeating models and makes, and above
average adjectives when those people describe their vehicles. The love affair that Americans have with their cars is not a dying quality....it's
still there, but very few Americans have vehicles that ignite that passion any more, for one reason or another. These days, they're just happy they
can save $10 a month at the gas pump, not be stranded because some faulty engine or electronic part decided to blow, and have the peace of mind that
the body will protect them if they should get into an accident.
To me, those are pretty low standards that should be a given with ANY vehicle, and it speaks worlds about what we've been groomed to accept.
1. I want a car that runs on free energy, whether it be solar, wind, or an electric generator (which still requires some outside power, but certainly
not a $50 fill-up at the gas pump every week). Until the oil companies and the corporations get out of the government that has their thumb on our car
makers, I don't see that happening any time soon....at least not in a way that will be affordable to the average American.
2. I want my cars to be designed, made, and assembled 100% COMPLETELY by Americans.....period. Not one single component made overseas.
3. I don't want to have to pay more than $8,000 for a high end vehicle. No reason on this green earth why we can't have that. But the unions need
to get out, the CEO's need to put the good of the country ahead of their fortunes, and Americans need to come together and provide for the country.
The battles are always between the CEO's and the workers, or the CEO's and the government. The American public is always caught in the middle.
4. Car dealerships need to be completely phased out. There's no need for them. Cut out the middle men, and we all will benefit!! One flat price
for every American....period. No haggle. Who cares how nice the show room looks? I don't. Especially if the price of that fancy showroom is being
rolled into the price of my new car. One simple office and a warehouse. No fancy tiles, desks, and brochures, no spacious luxury, no haggling, just
simple honest business again. Don't make me pay more for your advertising....just let the product speak for itself! GIVE a few thousand cars away
to the public and let THEM advertise through their own experiences. Enough of the fluff.
5. Let Americans get the best deals on cars....let the foreigners pay the premium prices. We're suppose to take care of our own, but the only
getting taken care of are the corporations.
6. Authorized repair shops should be flat rates...period. It's absurd that some of these folks are making $30 - $100 or more an hour, and then
charging, on top of that, 2 to 3 times more, (or even more in some cases), for the replacement part than what it is worth....are you freakin' kidding
me??? The strong sense of integrity, values and morals has all but disappeared in our country.
7. Taxes play a major role in this too, so I'm not letting the government off this one. Taxes drive up the cost of everything, and we're being
taxed on the same dollar a million different ways, every time it exchanges hands.
Taxed on the income that we use to buy the car. Taxed on the car when we buy it. Forced to buy insurance, which is never given back to us if we
don't use it (which is a criminal racket, in and of itself). Forced to buy tags and renew them every year. Forced to pay for tags/taxes on the
vehicles every year, depending on what state you live in. Force to pay for inspections every year. Then there's the inflated interest we pay on the
loan we're forced to take out to pay for the vehicle, because the price is so inflated from everything else, that we can't afford to pay cash. The
banks reel it in.
Then if, God forbid, you should default on your loan somewhere down the line, even if you've only got a 1,000 or more dollars to go, they reclaim
your vehicle and auction it to the highest bidder with no sharing of the profits to the person who has been working hard to pay it off for so many
years....if that's not robbery, I don't know what is. I've watched this happen a few times, and it's sickening to me, and even more so in the
housing market, because it's no different. It's a carnivorous buffet, with the American people as the main course.
So there are my feelings on the matter. Am I disgusted that a foreign car has given me more security than an American made car? You betcha! But I
wish it weren't that way. If they are making improvements, then great. I'll be watching....and listening. But I've been burned far too many
times to easily part with my money again.