Volkswagen Settles Diesel Emissions Lawsuit Right Before Trial Set To Begin (theverge.com)
Volkswagen settled a major diesel emissions class action lawsuit brought by hundreds of vehicle owners right before the case was set to go to trial. "The German auto giant's U.S. division settled the lawsuit brought by a North Carolina man and over 300 other owners of diesel cars who allege fraud and unfair trade practices," reports The Verge. From the report: The trial could have featured testimony from current and former VW executives and would likely have caused a spate of bad press for the automaker regarding the Dieselgate scandal. Since it first broke in 2015, the controversy has led to the resignation of VW's CEO, seen a handful of executives sentenced to jail, and resulted in billions of dollars in fines and settlements. VW is being sued by some consumers after it admitted to using software to cheat on diesel emissions tests, sparking the biggest scandal to hit the auto industry in decades. David Doar, the North Carolina man along with more than 300 other U.S. VW diesel owners, rejected settlement offers from a 2016 class action that would have reimbursed them for the value of their vehicles. Nearly all U.S. owners of affected VW vehicles agreed to take part in a $25 billion settlement in 2016, which included buyback offers and additional compensation for about 500,000 owners. But according to Reuters, some 2,000 owners have opted out, and most are pursuing separate claims seeking additional compensation.
The funniest part of this saga is the decades that Americans had to listen to Europeans going on and on about how their clean diesels were infinitely superior to the American gas guzzlers. Turned out the whole thing was a lie and they inhaled it for decades.
You are right. People should just sit back and accept that corporations can lie and pollute freely. If they complain, it must just be a money grab. Poor corporations certainly aren't trying to grab money - they just want to make good products for us all.
I'm German, and I know very well, where VW came from. The corporate culture did not magically change since back then. They're still the same pieces of shit. And if you want to work there, you either are like that, or you won't. Corporations are like lifeforms, in that they don't just change their personality either.
And remember: Nobody of nearly all employees needs to be a piece of shit himself, for the company to be one. It's enough for everyone just "doing his job", and saying "it's the rules" (which Germans LOVE, by the way. Hence the red pedestrian lights jokes.).
And German cars might have had a very good rep over in the US, but here in Germany, we're so used to them, that they are just normal. So with our always-complaining German attitude, you can bet that we bitched the fuck outta them. It might look like we disliked your cars in favor of ours. But it was more like us just hating ALL the things, and you hearing more about yours.:)
So I'm sorry to say that, but us finding our own companies sleazy lying manipulative pieces of overpriced shit with boring-as-fuck design and the personality of a chartered accountant who doesn’t even want to become a lion tamer, doesn't make American cars one bit less gas guzzlers that can't drive anywhere but in a straight line, with outdated technology and low build quality. ;)
(We Germans are very straightforward. VERY straightforward. Doesn’t mean we don't like ya.)
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For the record: For some time, Japanese cars were considered the best in reliability and quality around here. (That time seems to have passed.)
My car wasn't as green as I was told
Don't care. In fact, I'm taking my settlement money and having a performance chip put in my car.
Have gnu, will travel.
"regarding the Dieselgate scandal"
It's been more than 45 years since the Watergate break-in. Can we give the "-gate" suffix a rest already?
-- Alastair
I can only encourage everyone to sue Volkswagen. They have a big mouth, but once push comes to shove – they prefer to keep things under the hood. They even 'settled' here in Germany, where it is almost impossible to win against a company. Needless to say that they deserve what is coming to them and more.