ginsu wrote:I agree. As an American, I believe we have been starved for a good crop of small cars. I'm sick of people with their vans, pickup trucks (always with an empty bed), and SUVs taking up huge amounts of space on the road and on the streets. Don't people realize that America is not like it was in the '50s? I hate these huge vehicles when nobody does anything but drive alone in them.
I can't count the number of times I've seen a huge V8 Ford, or Chevy with nothing in the bed and not towing anything. Essentially, unless you hauling a load a pickup truck is virtually useless, and the ride is crap because of the leaf spring rear suspension and/or solid beam axle. I'm not saying pickups are useless, but I know for certain it's a huge waste to drive such big heavy objects without a specfic reason.
I would love to see more Americans adapt a 'euro' model, I'd love to see lots of small cars and people being conservative and intelligent with their purchasing power. The era of spend and forget America is gone, and it damn well should be. We will all remember how much we wasted and how little we appreciated, but we will
still know that we lived through some good times as Americans with loose credit.
It's not the people, its the regulations and the fact that in the USA, money is more important than people, and there are deffinately laws that prove just that.
If I were Fiat, I would be very careful in getting in too deep with Chrysler, because of the legacy costs surrounding the UAW. In the US, associations like that can be strong armed by the union labor laws into forcing unions onto unwilling partners. I have seen this practice first hand, and I must say that I was very disgusted since I invested 4 years of my life to help build that business, and after one contracted job, the union blasted us, and they went into bankruptcy fighting them in court...
Anyways, I hope that Dodge becomes just a truck line, Chrysler becomes a luxury line, and Plymouth becomes the economy line, all using the Fiat drivetrains (well, maybe keep the new Hemi...)
I just hope that it doesn't bring down Fiat. This quagmire of a resession that Chrysler is a large part of has all the markings of a money pit that will NEVER be filled....