I don't know why you can't get the foreign vehicles you want. But I'm sure the reason is NOT because they aren't made by an American country. If we all flip our garage doors open right now more than half of them have ricers.
Maybe you are missing the point. What I'd like to see is a better pool of quality vehicles we as american consumers have a choice of driving.I don't know why you can't get the foreign vehicles you want. But I'm sure the reason is NOT because they aren't made by an American country. If we all flip our garage doors open right now more than half of them have ricers.
What's available should be driven by technology and customer demand. I would bet that most car buyers really don't care if their car is gas or electric. They care what it costs, what the fuel costs are, what the maintenance costs are, and if it can go as far as they need it to go without refueling.Maybe you are missing the point. What I'd like to see is a better pool of quality vehicles we as american consumers have a choice of driving.
Our selections of vehicles should be much broader. American car manufacturers have many if not more issues than your "ricers." They are no longer built with good materials by hard working americans. Things have changed for the worse across the board.
The Government and customs have laws and restrictions on many imports that are more fuel efficient and better built than what we have available at dealerships. If they were allowed here, It would force our american dealerships to produce higher quality vehicles.
The majority of imports that you can get are only feasible by the super rich as novelties, not intended as daily drivers.
Yep. The Nissan Frontier is assembled in Mississippi, with an engine that is built in TN. Toyota's are assembled in Springhill, TN. Saves both a ton of money on import tarrifs to assemble the finished product here, regardless of where they source the individual parts. And thanks to NAFTA, the Fords and Chevys are assembled in Mexico and Canada, and don't have a lot of American labor involved in them any more.Is Ford/Chebby versus "ricer" even a valid argument considering how many Japanese companies build stateside?
Many Chevrolet vehicles are assembled in the United States, including:And thanks to NAFTA, the Fords and Chevys are assembled in Mexico and Canada, and don't have a lot of American labor involved in them any more.