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This is what the protection racket looks like at the industrial scale.Toyota [is] donating $1m to Donald Trump’s inauguration. Ford and GM also said they would give $1m each. The donations follow similar $1m contributions by Amazon and Meta as large companies look to cozy up to Trump in return for favorable treatment after he is in office. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has also said he would make a personal donation of $1m.
Trump’s proposed tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada would affect many automakers and could deliver supply chain shocks across the auto industry.
© 2015 Mutual Fund Observer. All rights reserved.
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"This is what the protection racket looks like at the industrial scale." Indeed.
Toyota VINs starting with "1", "4", or "5" represent vehicles assembled in the United States, VINs beginning with "2" indicate vehicles assembled in Canada, and vehicles with VINs beginning with "3" were assembled in Mexico. Vehicles with VINs that start with "J" were produced in Japan.
Happy Holidays, Derf
Now, if you like sedans you need to look at foreign makes. Other then TESLA, I’m not aware of any U.S. domiciled “automaker” who builds sedans - at least in scale. The Taurus, Impala, Chrysler 300 / Charger were beautiful sedans. All were the last of a dying breed - discontinued over the past decade,
I think a pickup (preferably an older one) makes a fine second vehicle. And, to a degree, what we used to call a panel truck (today’s SUV) also may serve that secondary purpose. There are things you can’t fit into a sedan, even with spacious trunks. For the few who tow heavy trailers, trucks make sense. I keep an old 2005 model for those rare occasions. But it seems ludicrous to drive something getting 15 MPG ten or twenty miles to the grocery for a few items or to a friend’s home. Factor in the higher insurance cost and 5-passenger sedans make even more sense. If you’re financing, think of the added interest on the loan you’re paying for all that empty cargo space & vacant 3rd or 4th row of seats.
For what purpose I ask? Safety? It’s a hell of a lot easier to stop or steer around a pending collision with a lower riding, low center-of-gravity, more maneuverable sedan compared to the high ride monsters that now dominate. If you think “safety” means walking away from the heap of smoldering wreckage after the head-on has already occurred, you’ve missed the most essential point about safety.
For some reason the Ford Motor Company has never asked me to endorse the F150, America’s most popular vehicle. I do think such substitutes for real cars contribute to our obesity epidemic just as much as Fritos and Domino’s Pizza. Think of how much good you’re doing your body by entering and exiting your new Camry!
Let me add, recliners & PC's , at least for me. Also note I drive a Forester Subie as seat seems to be a tad higher off the ground.
Have a good day, Derf
I’m the last of a dying breed in my desire to drive a sedan, preferably something with great handling which this model has. The trade off is a somewhat firmer ride. But I found Camrys I’ve rented in the past to feel a bit “mushy” so am grateful for a firmer suspension. Overall, a better ride than the Accord.
Great turn in the discussion thanks to @BenWP. I clocked in at near 300 pounds 20 years ago and then began a strict diet that I adhere to to this day. Exercise daily. Weight has remained steady at just under 180 lbs (5’8) for over a dozen years. So I understand the difficulty of losing weight. And it’s even harder to keep it off once you have lost it. 2200 calories per-day is about even-kneel for me. I was saddened to visit some friends over the holidays and see how their adorable children had “chunked-up” weight-wise since they were slim kids. But I know better then most what beer, pizza, cheese-laden pasta dishes & ice cream layered with chocolate on a regular basis can do to your weight and health.