Even David Letterman found room to mock it, but Toyota’s recent acceleration debacle is an episode the company would rather forget. The Japanese giant is mired in a controversial recall of vehicles for sudden acceleration defects, numbering 8.5 million in the United States alone. There is a growing clamour for the head of Toyota Motor Corporation’s CEO, Akio Toyoda. Old cases of vehicular homicide, such as that Koua Fong Lee, whose 1996 Camry killed three people after it shot up an exit ramp in 2006, may be reappraised.
In this sense, Toyoda and his maligned corporation join the pantheon of car companies that have erred on the side of lethal danger. Ford has no reason to gloat in Toyota’s misfortune, itself having recalled 14.9 million vehicles (a number that continues to rise) for a dubious cruise-control switch prone to causing spontaneous engine fires (Forbes.com, February 24).
The life of the modern consumer can be a dangerous one, and caveat emptor has never quite disappeared as a vital maxim for everyday purchases. Car deaths have a grizzly, spectacular element to them, exciting much public comment and calls for vengeance. But this obscures the fact that other, equally deadly events have taken place, often under the radar of popular anger. In the US alone, consumer goods have proven fatal on more occasions than people might care to remember. Think of the rather innocuous and ubiquitous peanut butter, source of a scandal last year that led straight to a Georgia processing plant, responsible for shipping more than 13,607,771 kilograms of peanut butter with salmonella trimmings. The casualties were high: eight deaths and 500 illnesses.
Last December, 50 million Roman-style window blinds and roller shades were recalled after it was revealed that five small children had perished to them. Sixteen others were almost strangled to death. And these are just a few samples that should be making purchasers flee the market.
When such instances take place, the suspicious eye will roam. The US Senate Commerce Committee is wondering whether the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had gotten too close to the car industry, letting standards slip. It has been known for some time now that Toyota has picked former National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) employees to fill its ranks.
The Senate Committee has sent a letter to the office of the Inspector General of the US Department of Transportation requesting a more expansive audit of NHTSA. The purpose — to investigate “industry-wide complaints or reports collected by NHTSA regarding sudden unintended acceleration and brake failure in automobiles with electronic throttle and braking control systems”. The audit, so claims the letter, will examine officials of the NHTSA excluded vital data from investigations.
Toyota has not covered itself in glory. An internal memorandum that was leaked to the press this week boasts of a “win” for the company in 2007 when it recalled a modest number of floor mats (only 55,000) over the issue of sudden acceleration. The enterprise saved the company $100 million. Speed is the essence in such recalls, and the company has proven tardy in that regard. It took the fatalities of four Californians in late 2009 to change Toyota’s unenthusiastic tone. But in so behaving, it is in rather good, if dire, company.
Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He currently lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com
Um Crikey- I may need to email someone directly- but about5 weeks again you ran a series of stories about fairfax charging for online media (hopeful attempt at tying my rant to a newsworthy issue).
Over the last few weeks I have become aware of the fact that when I open up my little crikey email of goodness at 1:30, at least 4 of the major stories have a link to be read ‘on full on our website’. And every Guy Rundle article gets this treatment. Which just makes me burn- cos Guy Rundle is a god and should be above this sort of technological glitch.
This ‘transfer to our website’ malarchy: (a) p*sses me off because our work browsers are slow enough to open, so now I have to wait another 3 minutes for me to read the story while I open a new window and everything formats, and (b) p*sses me off because EVERY TIME I connect to the crikey website to read the story, I am told that I need to log on to read it. But I am a subscriber! (I splutter every day). You sent this to my email address because I paid you to! The whole thing makes me feel inappropriately guilty (as though I haven’t paid for content and now the people who sit near me, monitoring my internet use like vultures, think I’m cheap), and smacks to me of making people pay (at least in time and patience) for online services. And now I have vented my spleen online, which has eaten up more precious minutes which I could have productively used reading about how dodgy Toyota and Ford are. Which might be my fault, but in this crazy modern world I’m putting it on you.
Anyway. Please fix your email subscription up, and/or stop asking me to put my password in every time I connect to an article on your website. Or I’m gonna start reading New Matilda instead. Honest.
Yours,
Annoyed reader.
Re. 21. Toyota recall: debacle puts it in good, if dire, company
“Car deaths have a grizzly, spectacular element to them …” – such blatant speciesism! Surely bears can only be blamed for a tiny proportion of these grisly events …
HERE HERE TO FLICKA!!!…..My thoughts exactly……….get rid of this “Read in full on website” crap!!!!!!!……or send out 2 versions of the daily email……..one you can keep the same and the second one can be as big and as long as necessary to include all the stories in full which you can just send to me and Flicka and anyone else similarily annoyed
Steve (Geelong)