Don't you know Toyota never makes mistakes for which they would need to
admit?
I heard the guy that convene Toyota to make a full size pickup was thinking
of killing himself. LOL
"C. E. White" <cewhite3@removemindspring.com> wrote in message
news:49411145$1@kcnews01...
> So where is Toyota's apology letter for some of their mistakes? How about
> an admission they screwed up something on thousands of engines that lead
> many people to have sludge problems, or that the monster Tundra is a huge
> mistake. Or that they have built some of the most boring vehicles ever
> conceived. How about an apology for the older 4Runners that had one of the
> highest death rate for any vehicle ever sold in the US?
>
> Ed
>
> "me" <noemail@nothere.com> wrote in message
> news
3l0k4lh1qe5ucvnn4i1p1kp93tq5p94ga@4ax.com...
>> For all you GM defenders who refuse to admit that GM screwed
>> themselves by refusing to recognize vehicle trends and build less
>> SUV's and trucks and invest in other production; by building low
>> quality cars; by building cars no one wants; and by generally
>> mismanaging the company - here is it from the horse's mouth (or more
>> accurately, horse's ass in the case of GM):
>>
>> http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081208/us_nm/us_gm_ad
>>
>> "... we acknowledge we have disappointed you," the ad said. "At times
>> we violated your trust by letting our quality fall below industry
>> standards and our designs became lackluster."
>>
>> The unsigned open letter, entitled "GM's Commitment to the American
>> People" ran in the trade journal Automotive News, which is widely read
>> by industry executives, lobbyists and other insiders.
>>
>> In the ad, GM admits to other strategic missteps analysts and critics
>> have said hastened its recent decline.
>>
>> "We have proliferated our brands and dealer network to the point where
>> we lost adequate focus on the core U.S. market," the ad said. "We also
>> biased our product mix toward pick-up trucks and SUVs."
>>
>>
>