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A lot of high end cars get wrecked because (1) their owners want to drive them fast to test out what they paid for, and (2) their owners are not trained to drive high performance cars and (3) their owners drive them on public roads where there are a lot of hazards.

It isn't that different than the non-significant number of rich people that die in private aviation crashes (those that fly themselves, I think private jets are a lot safer.)


Sometimes it is (4) their owners let a friend drive the car and the friend is not remotely equipped to handle the car at the speeds involved.

Not saying that's what happened here (I haven't seen any reporting on who was driving vs who was the passenger) but it is at least part of the reason Paul Walker is dead.

Of course, the owners themselves even if they are skilled drivers, shouldn't be driving outside of legal limits on public roads.

If you have an exotic sports car worth half a million dollars and you want to go crazy with it then rent a track, you can afford it.


And a track day can cost just a few hundred bucks. It's not like you have to rent a whole track just for yourself.

Yep. I started looking into sports cars recently, and the general consensus among enthusiasts seems to be that for public roads, if you're not going to drive at reckless speeds then you'll have more fun driving a slow car fast than driving a fast car slow. Fun handling with modest horsepower is the way to go, you can have a great time without exceeding normal road speeds.

That is why people love miatas.

The fact that you can’t tell the difference between a driver and a passengers responsibility is shocking to me.

You've yet to provide a source for this. That's why the criticisms of your claims.

Video of him stunting, killing himself and his passenger. Purely his fault and reckless and purposeful behavior.

https://www.reddit.com/r/CatastrophicFailure/comments/1ptc7c...


Looks like the post was neutered, but this is another source. The speed of the car was well in excess of what the road conditions could tolerate. Horrible crash, but the fault can be placed squarely on the driver of the car.

https://www.indiatimes.com/trending/what-happened-to-vince-z...


Is there reporting that actually lists him as the driver? Because I can't find any.

The news report linked in the article has this to say:

> The driver, Zampella, was trapped in the ensuing car fire, the CHP said. He died at the scene and the passenger died at a hospital, authorities told NBC4 Investigates. Details about the passenger's identity were not immediately available.


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> The single-car crash was reported at about 12:45 p.m. on the scenic road north of Los Angeles in the San Gabriel Mountains. The southbound Ferrari veered off the road just after exiting a tunnel, hit a concrete barrier and a passenger was ejected, the California Highway Patrol said.

> The driver, Zampella, was trapped in the ensuing car fire, the CHP said. He died at the scene and the passenger died at a hospital

https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/local/video-game-develope...


Ok, but no where do I see any credible claims of reckless speed or irresponsible driving. Without some evidence you’re just jumping to conclusions here.



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