- 27,387
- Toronto
- NewAesthetic
- SlipZtrEm
I get what you're saying, but you severely overestimate how much I care about this website. It ain't gonna be the end of my world if I'm banned or score some 'naughty' points.
I don't remember estimating anything. I simply reminded you of the handful of very basic rules you yourself agreed to when you joined.
And I enjoy how you and the rest of you continue to gloss over the fact that the Commodore was the best selling car in its class, the fact it was in the top 10 selling cars of the entire country. Sales were down, yes. But it still outsold the majority of the cars in the country. No matter how you want to cut it, the numbers don't lie. None of you have disproven that. You just keep ignoring that very important point and saying it was a failure.
It's almost as if you've come to a conclusion before the debate started, and refuse to listen to any point that proves you wrong and instead just deafly repeat yourself over and over again as if it makes your point more correct. Sort of like how you're projecting that onto me. "Nope you're wrong, none of what you say is correct *insert fingers in ears*"
*sigh*
It sold well in a dwindling class, in one country. On a global scale, it means very little. GM therefore had a choice: continue pouring money into a car with very limited global appeal, or import a car that it can sell in many more countries, that is likely to satisfy a substantial part of the potential market.
The F-150 is a vehicle similarly built for one market, but it's a massive money-maker and the best-selling vehicle in that market for 35 years. The Aussie-built Commodores don't enjoy a similar status.
Does GM know that there's going to be some people deeply offended by the end of the more traditional Commodore? Yeah, probably. It's also probably figured out only a handful of these folks were ever going to be potential buyers.