socialcarpet
Banned
- :
- 2014 Mazda5 Sport 6 speed manual
Here you go buddy, come out from underneath your rock sometime and educate yourself. Chances are you may have already owned or driven an mexican built vehicle without you knowing it.
Read this, especially the "History" section and the "Companies with official representation brands in Mexico" section.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Automotive_industry_in_Mexico
Yup, I have. I had a Volkswagen Jetta that was built in Mexico.
The driver side door kept LOOSENING itself because the bolts holding it on where somehow not attached properly. I had to keep tightening it back on with a socket wrench.
That was my first and last Mexican car. Trust me, I pay close attention to where my cars are built and where the parts are sourced. I even have the VIN codes memorized. No more VIN's beginning in "3" for me, if I can help it. "J","W" and "Y" are good to go. "1" and "2" aren't desirable, but they're acceptable I guess.
But I'm not opposed to anyone else buying cars made elsewhere I just hope we don't reach a point where you have to spend $35-40k or more to get a car that's built in Japan or German instead of Mexico or South America or even the deep South. Believe me, A LOT of people feel the same way I do, they just aren't willing to come out and say it because it's politically incorrect. When Toyota starts building Lexus models in Mexico and their quality and reliability doesn't skip a beat, I could begin to change my opinion, but until then, I'd prefer a car built in Japan. Again, there's also a novelty factor to this. It just seems to me a Japanese car ought to be built in Japan. A German car ought to be built in Germany and there should be international labor laws that prevent manufacturers from exporting skilled labor jobs from their own countries, damaging their home economies to make a quick buck by exploiting cheap labor and lax environmental regulation. I'd like to think Mazda had a bit more integrity than the others, at least until recently when I guess their hand was probably forced by greedy shareholders. It's a shame.
If you disagree with me on the variations in the quality of labor, there are plenty of other reasons to oppose this trend. Mexican auto workers make less than half of the U.S. minimum wage and they have virtually no collective bargaining rights. That is unethical and immoral. Every $3/hr job in Mexico is one last decent paying middle class job in Japan or the United States or Europe. Not good. Who knew just how right Ross Perot was about NAFTA. (boom02)