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Re: alfa-digest V8 #1083
On Friday, September 6, 2002, at 03:53 PM, alfa-digest wrote:
Date: Fri, 6 Sep 2002 14:58:52 EDT
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Alfa and US safety laws
In a message dated 9/6/2002 12:27:48 AM Central Daylight Time,
[email protected] writes:
we Alfa Romeo lovers would like to have to have new Alfas.
At one time, if a marque wasn't represented in the USA, one could
just
buy one overseas and bring it back (or, there were places like
Zumbach's in New York who would do it for you). Now we can't. Why?
because new Alfas can't pass the SAME US safety laws as those laws
that
SUVs DON'T HAVE TO PASS! What good are safety laws when the largest
single type of vehicle bought in this country isn't required to
adhere
to those laws? I'll tell you what it does. It makes a mockery of the
laws, and it keeps many people from buying the brand and type of car
they want. That's what it does, and I, for one, resent it. The guy
who
wants to buy a non-complying truck, because that's his passion, gets
to
do so with Uncle Sam's blessing. Those of us who want to follow our
passion and buy a new Alfa Romeo cannot, because the same laws that
lets SUVs exist won't let us bring an Alfa into the USA. That's
Freedom?
My 2 Cents worth.
George Graves
Well, it ain't even worth that much. We don't have Alfa in the US for
a much
simpler reason....by the time they pulled out they could not give a
car away,
let alone sell one. I believe that in their last year in the US they
sold
something like 600 cars, maybe fewer.
True (actually it was less than 500 cars in all of North America
including Canada). But that's NOT the point.
Same story for Renault, Peugeot, and a
host of others. Do you really think that Fiat could not engineer a
car to
meet US standards if there was a market for them here?
Of course they could, but again, that's NOT the point.
Meeting those
standards is not rocket science and how to do it is well known in the
industry. Does this mean that they are not as good engineers as Kia
and
Hyundai who meet the standards with ease? So cut the crap about US
safety
and emission standards keeping Alfa away...only thing keeping Alfa
away is a
committment by Fiat...nothing more.
You seem to miss my point completely. All of the manufacturers that you
mention have every right to decide not to have a sales presence here.
They made that decision because at the time they pulled out, they
didn't sell enough product here to justify the cost of maintaining a
dealership network, warranties, parts and service, and the numbers sold
certainly did not warrant the tremendous expense of 'federalizing'
their cars. Alfa, in particular, had, essentially, no product. Alfa had
only an almost 30 year-old Spider which was getting its lunch eaten by
the then new Mazda Miata which cost less and looked fresher while
providing what looked (on paper anyway) like a similar performing car,
and the 164. A large sedan which looked like a Peugeot and cost like a
Cadillac.
But Alfas didn't have official dealer networks in the USA before or
right after WWII either. Yet, if Americans wanted new Alfas, they could
get them. In fact, one could get anything if one wanted it. Now,
because of stupid laws that are so unevenly applied that the most
popular vehicles in the country are exempt from them, one can't even go
to Europe, buy a new Alfa (or Peugeot 206 WRC, or TVR or MG or
whatever), and bring it back. But Bubba and every soccer mom in the
country can buy an SUV which pollutes far more, uses much more gas, and
is far more deadly and dangerous on the road than any non-complying
European car that a few thousand Americans might feel strongly enough
about to want to go to Europe and buy. That;s what I'm complaining
about, not the fact that these auto manufacturers have decided not to
officially participate in this market. This is what puts us behind an
Automotive Iron Curtain. This is what limits our freedom of choice. And
I'll tell you, if these stupid laws were actually proven effective, and
if they were fairly applied in such a way that ALL vehicles had to
comply equally to them, I might be a little less angry about this
hypocrisy on the part of our government "for our own good" than I am
now. I'm tired of know-nothing bureaucrats telling me what is and isn't
in my best interest! I'm an American, dammit. I don't need a blinking
Big Brother!
George Graves
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