| Since it seems to be Housekeeping Day, here an email from someone who hides behind a Gmail address, who does not sign his mail, and who calls us unethical . Mr Anonymous writes:
Dear Mr. Anonymous: I don't call that unethical, I call that showing initiative. When I was young, I was in the investigative reporting business, and I operated as ethically as an undercover cop. Compared to that, what Derek did was benign. If not buying a car after a test drive is stealing a salesman's time and hope, then some 70 percent of people who ask for a test drive would be criminals. Last I looked, wasting someone's time and robbing someone's hope was not against the law. I wish it were, I could launch thousands of lawsuits. I see huge class action suits against politicians, corporations, presumptive employers, alleged lovers. The concept would make divorce proceedings very interesting:
I tell you what is unethical: Giving ringers to journalists. Carmakers who insist that only official press cars should be tested often have something to hide. A car for a test drive should show the best sides of the car. Having said that, our first approach will always be to get a press car. If we don't get one, dealers, friends, rental car agencies are fair game. from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com | |||
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