sploo
Somewhat extinguished member
Why do people vote Tory? Why to people vote for Trump? Why do people buy manufactured pop music? Don't work under the illusion that the public are competent in making rational decisionsIf they truly were “worse in every measurable way” why do they sell so well? The Tesla Model Y was the best selling car in both Europe and America last year. I’ve had modest size SUV’s for nearly 20 years now. After test driving the first one I knew there was no going back to a saloon or hatchback. Far more comfortable and a better driving position. Also a darn sight easier to get in and out of many of them. They also seem to fare better in crash tests.
Having ended up with an god-awful SUV as a loan vehicle once I will concede that they are indeed a lot easier to get in and out of; especially when your knees make noises like an old modem connecting to the Internet.
(EDIT: my knees are like an old modem; I wasn't making a jibe about the infirm)
As an owner of a station wagon (estate) I fully approve of this messageAs to why folks buy big fugly SUV, look no further;
Arms race to the bottom
There was another study from Uni
Michigan looking at purchasing rationales, which I can't find now.
Where a consumer can choose between a regular vehicle or an SUV-type vehicle (i.e. excluding professional or locality, eg builders and folks living off road etc) basically the high driving position and bulk make women feel faster, and allow men to project masculinity.
The Detroit car industry tried to suppress that study because it found essentially that men who scored high in perceived masculine attributes (income, sports involvement, # children, self-esteem etc.) generally drove station wagons, mpvs, and other types of family- and group- oriented vehicles, whereas men who scored lower on the self-esteem scale drove SUVs.
The controversial conclusion was the men who were having lots of kids (i.e ***) and were involved in tonnes of sports (physically active, social group leadership) needed roomy vehicles to move a their kids, their teams, and their gear.
On the other side, men who lacked self confidence and felt oppressed drove SUV and light trucks to project masculinity and virility.
In short, guys with big 'richards' drive mini vans.
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