bmwbav wrote:
I'll vote that you have to pay too, every time.
The most telling line of your arguments thus far.
What gives you the right to "vote" money out of my pocket? Are you going to reimburse me for the additional cost?
Doubtless you'll be thrilled at my next statement: I am going to die. Either by your hand as a result of our debate, the hand of my wife, possibly the kids, maybe the car you've regulated that shouldn't injure me (potentially driven by the wife or kids), or, God willing and I'm lucky, of old age.
From our numbers, just simple math, in the next 35 years of driving I'll have a .85% chance of hitting a pedestrian with my car, a .05% chance of killing one. In all likelihood, I'll never hit a pedestrian.
For this chance, you usurp the right to take money out of my pocket for my choice of a new car. You don't pay my mortgage, you don't put groceries on my table, but you reserve the right to increase my cost for the minuscule possibility that I may run in to a pedestrian.
What prevents you from then determining that my 320i is unsafe, bereft of all modern safety devices? The fact that you like cars to? Small comfort that.
Regulations are important and serve a vital function. Just not all of them, especially not when they're solely dependent upon your good will for the moment. God forbid somebody with a 320i run in to you (and in my case, you're quite safe - the car hasn't run in several years!).
From your list of regs:
101 - Controls and Displays the market will quickly weed out those vehicles that have poor ergonomics. Unless the buyers are Italian car aficionados, in which case they'll be a vocal minority.
102 - Standard No. 102 Transmission Shift Lever Sequence for the same reason as 101. Not a lot has changed with auto transmission gear selectors in the intervening years. A quick google search shows Hurst had filed a reverse lockout a year before the regulation; markets work
113 - Hood Latch System even the dealer has to open the hood. It's a latch.
114 - Theft Protection nothing has stopped criminals from stealing cars and going on wild police chases.
531 - Passenger Automobile Average Fuel Economy Standards let the market determine
581 - Bumper Standard why? Let designers design; if the car is expensive to repair, word gets around that insurance is expensive - let the market decide
582 - Insurance Cost Information Regulation call your insurance agent, they'll tell you.
583 - Automobile Parts Content Labeling really? Who cares? Is it reliable? Word gets around if it breaks.
And there are probably a few more that I'm ambivalent about. As much as I think the crash standards are important, cars of yore didn't have them, and word got around about what cars would kill you in an accident - my beloved Z-cars among them. Don't get hit in one, you won't do well. That was back in the mid 80s. I'd drive a Z-car again, even in today's land of the 5000lb SUV behemoths, but there won't be a new one produced, it'd never get off the drawing board today.
And for many of these I'm ambivalent about, I think today's culture and market would opt for them anyway. Volvo and Mercedes had crash work done well before it was mandated, so it's not like all manufacturers were out to kill you just to sell their product. I'm a lot more comfortable with consumers determining what makes it to the market than I am you telling me I have to have a back up camera.
What about the FF 818? Should it meet all of the federal regs for crash standards? Funds and space unlimited, I'd already have one. Same goes for the Cobra, too. Death traps? Possibly.
Maybe today's business culture mandates these regs, there certainly are auto execs, like the stories of Ford and the Pinto - they knew there was a risk, and calculated profits against a redesign. I'd have been fired from Ford, because I couldn't do that. Others, obviously, not so much.
Maybe it's to protect against the lawsuits - hey, we met the standard, good luck suing us. There are insurance fraudster's too, so it's not like all consumers are angels either.
At what point do we allow freedom of choice, and at what cost?