Hate toward imports?
i live by alot so its common for me to get challenged daily by a mustang or something. I just ignore them, since the police headquarters are a block down.

i dislike people who buy what ever car and then proceed to tell everyone else why their car is superior to EVERYTHING ... and if you disagree you must be a complete moron
Take the Saturn Astra, for example, which I recently reviewed.......an "American" compact sold and marketed by GM's Saturn Division. It has an American nameplate.....fine. It was designed in Germany by GM's Opel division. The engine is built in Hungary. Transmissions come from Austria. Other major parts come from Germany and numerous Eueopean nations. Final asembly is a plant in Belgium. The finished car is sold, in slightly tweaked versions, as a British Vauxhall Astra, German Opel Astra, and, of course, an American Saturn Astra. So, unlike the more-or-less truly American Saturn S-series of the 1990's, today's car buyer rolls out of a Saturn dealership thinking he/she has an all-American compact, when in reality he/she is driving a conglomeration of parts from all over Europe.
The Astra, by no means, is alone....this is more or less typical of the majority, if not most, of today's vehicles. Even the big "All-American" Ford Crown Victoria........popular with police and taxi operators, and your classic stereotype baseball/hot-dogs/ apple-pie American dinosaur....actually has more foreign-sourced parts in it than domestic (that was done for CAFE reasons).
Another small car I recently reviewed, the Chevy Aveo, is the same thing.....a foreign-sourced car with an American nameplate. It is built in South Korea, by the Daewoo Corporation, for Chevy, primarily because Daewoo does not sell in the U.S. any more under its own nameplate, and GM has a financial interest in it.
So, my point is, if you think you are buying an "American" vehicle at that Ford, GM, or Chrysler dealership..............you will very likely have to think again.
Last edited by mmarshall; Jul 28, 2008 at 12:06 PM.
I know a guy who has a BASE Mercedes C320 and he thinks it's the best vehicle in the world. It doesnt even have navigation or HIDs, but he justifies that by saying HID looks cheap and navigation "degrades" a vehicle.
Take the Saturn Astra, for example, which I recently reviewed.......an "American" compact sold and marketed by GM's Saturn Division. It has an American nameplate.....fine. It was designed in Germany by GM's Opel division. The engine is built in Hungary. Transmissions come from Austria. Other major parts come from Germany and numerous Eueopean nations. Final asembly is a plant in Belgium. The finished car is sold, in slightly tweaked versions, as a British Vauxhall Astra, German Opel Astra, and, of course, an American Saturn Astra. So, unlike the more-or-less truly American Saturn S-series of the 1990's, today's car buyer rolls out of a Saturn dealership thinking he/she has an all-American compact, when in reality he/she is driving a conglomeration of parts from all over Europe.
The Astra, by no means, is alone....this is more or less typical of the majority, if not most, of today's vehicles. Even the big "All-American" Ford Crown Victoria........popular with police and taxi operators, and your classic stereotype baseball/hot-dogs/ apple-pie American dinosaur....actually has more foreign-sourced parts in it than domestic (that was done for CAFE reasons).
Another small car I recently reviewed, the Chevy Aveo, is the same thing.....a foreign-sourced car with an American nameplate. It is built in South Korea, by the Daewoo Corporation, for Chevy, primarily because Daewoo does not sell in the U.S. any more under its own nameplate, and GM has a financial interest in it.
So, my point is, if you think you are buying an "American" vehicle at that Ford, GM, or Chrysler dealership..............you will very likely have to think again.
So is it better to to buy a Toyota built in the US so US workers assembled it or a Ford built in Mexico?
Last edited by bagwell; Jul 29, 2008 at 08:43 AM. Reason: spelling!
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i've owned just about every brand of car over my lifetime and always liked them all for whatever their positive aspects were.
Good. That shows you were thinking.

Last edited by mmarshall; Jul 29, 2008 at 12:26 PM.
The Subaru plant in Lafayette, IN that produced your Legacy (the same plant that built my Outback), now produces Toyota Camrys as well, since Toyota bought out part of Subaru.
Kinda dissapointed that Subaru's own hybrid, the TPH was cancelled. So much promise, but then they are a small company that can only afford so much.











