I feel obliged to correct WhiteBlue a little, I know he mentions I support "green cars" with all good intention. It's that I think I can interpret the feeling of many people here.
[Rant]
Simple: I don't think cars
can be "green".
I'm interested in efficient engines because I think it's a worthy goal by itself, but I've said many times that green racing cars are like green sulphuric acid plants: an oxymoron.
Having said that, I still believe that cars are living their last decades. Ultralight planes are the future, car racing is a sport that will fade, the way locomotive races did. I strongly believe this will happen before I die.
I imagine that some day, some valiant lawyer will sue BMW, Mercedes, FIAT and the rest for the people killed in their cars, the same way some day, not many years ago, another brave lawyer sued the tobacco companies.
Besides, it's much more important the layout of our cities than the ways of transportation, as I've explained to the satisfaction of the forum. There is a direct relationship between city density and oil per capita.
Besides, I dislike the concept of "green" things. As proposed to this date, "green movements" are a feeble excuse for people in developed countries to continue living like princes while the world suffers a poverty that is truly offensive for people like me, that look at it in the eye day after day.
I'm not talking about effluents and contamination.
The gravest thing about cars is the people dead. No KERS nor catalytic converter will change that.
And that's why I don't talk about green racing cars (except the ones made by our friend Greenpower Dude Reloaded). There are no green cars. The only green transportation is a bus or a bycicle, not because they contaminate less, but because they are safer.
[/Rant]
If they wanted to encourage less money spent, the recipe is simple: award points to the most cost efficient team, or make a cup for them. Btw, a cup that gives them enough monetary reward to continue in the sport, the way Le Mans do with their Efficiency Index Cup.
On the point in discussion, I think that the amount of money earned through TV rights can self sustain F1, if someone wished to, instead of paying the cars through manufacturers and putting the money in someone pockets.
It's funny to see FOMA earning a lot and teams going bankrupt, like Super Aguri. The teams are a little stupid, if you ask me.
If you see the issue under that light, the budget cap is a little ironic. If I were an F1 team (and F1 teams could talk) I would say something like: "The guy that gets his money through my effort gives me advice on how to restrain my spending... Thanks, guy."
