There’s no other way to say this other than to say it: I think we’re in the automotive bizarro world. I could probably construct a detailed analysis of how we got here, involving the Bretton Woods Agreement of 1944, NAFTA, the lack of executive-level prosecutions after the Global Financial Crisis, and the value of the Korean won relative to the Japanese yen. Or, and hear me out here, what if the cancellation of the G8 ST truck created a schism in the multiverse?
If The Morning Dump is to be published in the actual morning, I think I’m going to go with how the axing of Pontiac (and therefore of the Pontiac G8 ST sport truck–what would have been a modern El Camino) is what split us off into the bizarro world we now inhabit. Is it a bad bizarro world? That’s going to depend on your view of things, but the opposite of good isn’t always bad.
Let’s start right up top with the reality that the world we live in is one in which Michael Jordan could bring NASCAR to its knees. Then there’s the White House, which clearly loves two kinds of cars: Big trucks and… tiny EVs and hybrids. Huh.
Carvana. Remember when we were all convinced Carvana was going to die? Now it’s up 10,000% and joining the S&P 500. That’s quite the turnaround. Volkswagen has gone the opposite direction, stumbling at seemingly every turn. One of the few VW bright spots has been SEAT/Cupra, so it makes sense that the executive behind the brands has… left the company to make Gin.
Sure. Fine. Makes perfect sense.
Michael Jordan Thinks NASCAR Is An Illegal Monopoly, And He Takes That Personally

I’m surprised that the lawsuit against NASCAR by two of its teams has gone forward. The sport proudly reached back to its heritage as the progeny of moonshiners who, with no revenuers to outrun, turned to racing.
Two of the sport’s teams are alleging that the illegality has continued, this time in the form of an illegal monopoly. The two teams are Front Row Motorsports and 23XI Racing, formed by Denny Hamlin and longtime NASCAR fan Michael Jordan.
My shock comes not from NASCAR’s intrasegence, as the sport has long been run by one family that has accrued huge power over the years. Nor is the unwillingness of Michael Jordan to bend that surprising to me, given that I think Jordan might be the most competitive person who has ever lived.
I just assumed that, at some point, various lawyers would remind both sides that discovery exists, which means that a lot of information that was formerly private is going to become public. Having imbibed moonshine out of jars with NASCAR management, I cannot imagine this would go well for them.
There’s a long piece in The Athletic about the early part of the trial, and the other person who appears confused about why this trial is happening is the judge:
Kenneth D. Bell, the federal judge presiding over the legal showdown between NASCAR and the two race teams suing it, alleging illegal monopolistic practices over a dispute about the sport’s charter system, issued that warning this summer. Many times, in public hearings and behind closed doors, Bell cautioned there would be no winners in the case. His message throughout has been that the only way this case could end on somewhat good terms is for 23XI Racing and Front Row Motorsports to find common ground with the league and settle.
Bell was clearly correct, and you should just refer to this section:
They are playing with fire.” NASCAR commissioner Steve Phelps said in an email to Prime about the teams’ hesitancy over the charter agreement. “Lots of options, but all have the same theme: Pick a date and they can sign or lose their charters. It is that simple.”
Almost assuredly, it will only get messier. How could it not? There will be more animosity, more evidence that paints one party or the other in an unflattering light, and a list of potential witnesses that just happens to include team owner Richard Childress. In an exchange of text messages recently unearthed during the discovery process, Childress was disparaged by Phelps, who said Childress should be “taken out back and flogged” and called him a “stupid redneck who owes his entire fortune to NASCAR.”
I’m not sure where this ends, but if NASCAR loses, The Athletic says that it’ll potentially have to divest from the tracks it owns and give back hundreds of millions of dollars to teams. If NASCAR wins, the teams that sued are in trouble, and the sport will have gained immense power.
The President Wants Tiny Cars
President Donald J. Trump has approved TINY CARS to be built IN AMERICA! ???????? pic.twitter.com/bE4ropoDLu
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) December 7, 2025
I still don’t know what to do with this information. The White House has sent out a tweet stating that the President has “approved TINY CARS to be built IN AMERICA.” The accompanying video shows a tiny Toyota truck of some sort on a Hot Wheels track.
Just to be safe, I checked the Federal Register this morning to see if there was any new action from the federal government that could make this a possibility. There is not. There is, however, an application for a habitat conservation plan for the Sand Skink and Blue-Tailed Moke Skink in Polk County, Florida, if you are interested.
Obviously, you all care about this because we got more than 300 comments on the original article last week, but the how remains uncertain. This is very obviously a result of the administration realizing that cars are not getting any cheaper, which is going to be difficult given everything that this administration is also doing. So the answer to “what does winning look like” is, I guess, getting people to buy tiny cars.
I’m a new urbanist, and I like tiny cars, which means I’m all for this. No matter how we got here, I am exactly the kind of sicko who is tentatively on board with the idea. As everyone is pointing out, however, this seems unworkable on the surface. I think Axios summed it up nicely:
Even if the U.S. finds a way to legalize them, as Trump has instructed Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy to do, the laws of economics and physics will almost certainly ensure it never happens.
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They don’t meet U.S. safety regulations.
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Automakers can’t build them profitably in the U.S.
Yes, but I want small cars, so perhaps this isn’t the worst thing to ever happen if it happens. It’s still bizarre, though.
Carvana Is Joining The S&P 500

When Carvana got hit with a bunch of investigations back in 2023, there was an assumption that the company might go under. In fact, we went so far as to speculate about how we could take Carvana’s car vending machines and turn them into Autopian clubhouses.
That didn’t happen, and the lack of affordability in new cars has meant that Carvana’s relatively easy online car-buying process has translated into it now joining the elite companies in the S&P 500.
It’s a milestone for Tempe, Arizona-based Carvana, which has jumped to around $400 per share currently from a 2022 low of less than $4 — a 10,000% gain — as its efforts to cut costs and restructure debt have helped boost earnings. The company said it sold a record of about 156,000 vehicles in the most recent quarter.
What a ride.
Wayne Griffiths Has A Gin

I didn’t expect this one. SEAT/Cupra is VW’s Spanish offshoot. They’re also a pair of brands that represent a mix of fun, affordable cars and a mix of hybrids and electric cars. It’s sort of everything that the actual Volkswagen brand hasn’t been in a while.
At the center of that, as Automotive News reports, was Wayne Griffiths:
Griffiths, who became CEO of Seat and Cupra in 2020, was a well-regarded automotive executive within VW Group. He was selected as an Automotive News Europe Eurostar in 2023.
The British executive had large ambitions for Cupra. The Spanish brand last year revealed intentions to sell vehicles in the U.S.
By November 2024, Cupra said it had begun preliminary talks with auto retail giant Penske Automotive Group for an exclusive partnership to retail sporty crossovers to younger U.S. consumers by 2030.
Griffiths left, and thanks to his LinkedIn page, we now know why:
I’ve wanted to do something like this for years, but the timing was never right. Now, I finally had the space to follow an idea that had been quietly growing for a long time. Because sometimes in life you have to follow your passions, wherever they take you.
This really is something truly unique: a gin that dispenses with anything that isn’t 100% natural, to create a precious distillate using only the quintessence of natural alcohol and botanicals.
No shortcuts, no artificial flavourings, nothing added. Only real ingredients, carefully selected and treated with the patience they deserve.
I love a good botanical gin. Wayne, if you’re reading this, please send me some. Also, respect. I respect it. You only have so much time on this planet, don’t waste it.
What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD
There’s a new documentary on the singer-songwriter Jeff Buckley, and it’s got me revisiting his catalog. Here’s “Lover, You Should Have Come Over.”
The Big Statement/The Big Question
I want to thank all of you for supporting this place by reading, sharing, commenting, and becoming a member. Today is the anniversary of the launch of our membership program, which means a lot of you are renewing this week. Thank you! It’s an incredible dream to keep doing this, and it’s impossible without all of you.
Ok, question time. It’s bizarro-world, but it’s not all bad bizarro. What’s the best piece of unexpected good news that’s come out of the post-G8 cancellation world?
Top photo: Carvana






One of the most fun cars you can buy is a Corolla.
The GM division which makes no sports cars is going into F1.
Whatever it is that Jaguar did.
A car company made a new model which was smaller and lighter than its predecessor (ND vs. NC).
Some of the best styled cars available are Hyundai/Kias.
Speaking of Hyundai, it was the first company to make a fun EV.
I could go on. Or just quote the Hitchhiker’s Guide:
“There is a theory which states that if ever anyone discovers exactly what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There is another theory which states that this has already happened.”
The best Uber/Bolt/Taxi/rental I’ve had the pleasure of riding in are Toyota Corolla Wagons. With the hHybrid gave them the snap off the line in heavy traffic, reasonably small size to make it in urban environments, reasonably good fuel economy that I don’t need to keep an eye on the gauge, and large enough to fit a family of four plus luggage (or 5 with the Uber/Bolt driver)
Personally, I blame the Large Hadron Collider.
I think when they first turned it on, it generated a warp bubble that we’ve been stuck in with an alternate reality. The real reality is continuing and when the bubble pops, everyone in this timeline disappears and the real-time line continues.
Oh no, it’s the “Remember Me” episode of TNG. The warp bubble is continually shrinking and I don’t think the Traveler will save us.
I can’t read Hadron without switching the D and the R. My sense of humor is still that of a 12-year old.
Admittedly, drinking makes the world make more sense at this juncture in time, so I’d likely pivot to a distillery if I had CEO level money.
Because I’m sober (and don’t like gin), I find the incessant babbling of the Bizarro World of ‘social media/the internet and whatever the next tech scheme is/Wall Street/most high-level politics’ mostly exhausting and a waste of otherwise useful resources. If you can’t sound smart, at least baffle them with BS, I suppose.
The ginding reality of ‘I’m trying to survive/chip away at my colossal debt pile/make sure my loved ones are cared for’ is acutal reality. Less exciting, but more rewarding.
Best news in recent times? David’s going to be building a Jeep and I’m excited to see the articles about it. Especially since this project won’t make me wonder if he’s got his tetanus shot up-to-date.
Don’t be ridiculous. David will find a way to cut himself on some bit of NOS Jeep with 80yo virus on it. He’d best make sure that shot is up to date. But I am looking forward to these articles too.
I DEFINITELY agree with the rest of your take, and at this point Wall Street is very obviously even more detached from reality than Donald J. Trump. I’m just thankful that I don’t have any debt. Nor anyone to be responsible for other than a small but demanding cat. I managed to go about five years sans furry mistress before the parasites in my brain demanded I get another one.
Yes.
Related: My gosh, the fact that this garbage administration loves AI slop videos is just the perfect encapsulation of it all. Terrible grifters posting terrible slop built on stolen work from actual artists and filmmakers. It’s a match made in hell. Unfortunately, the rest of us also live in hell.
I haven’t given a shit about NASCAR as a sport since the early 2000s, so I’m here for the drama. Please and thank you.
Jeff Buckley = GOAT
Happy Birthday!!!!!
I suspect that one reason why kei cars are so accepted and so popular in Japan, is that speed limits are generally much lower than in the USA. For example, in Japan the highest speed limit you will see on a surface street is 60 km/h (37 mph), but 40 km/h (24 mph) and 50 km/h (31 mph) are very common. Urban expressways (divided highways) within major cities often have a speed limit of 60 km/h. Intercity expressways can have limits as high as 120 km/h (75 mph), but a 100 km/h (62 mph) limit or less is quite common. I was fortunate to recently spend a week in Tokyo and surrounding areas, and the transportation choices make a lot of sense when you are in the local environment.
By contrast, here in the USA I can drive a mile from my house in the suburbs and enter an interstate highway with a posted limit of 70 mph – actual travel speeds usually are a lot higher. I would not be comfortable driving 70+ mph in a kei car around the massive vehicles that we have here in the USA.
In Texas, there are parts of I-10 where the speed limit is 80 mph, and obviously people, often in Ford pickups, going far faster. And even a toll road from San Antonio to Austin where the speed limit is 85. My ex-wife routinely did 100+ and never got pulled over. And if she ever did, was pretty enough and such a sweetie she could probably talk her way out of a ticket. A previous wife did exactly that in Pennsylvania after getting pulled over doing 85 on I-90 (55 mph speed limit) with a California DL and expired CA tags. I guess they had the Force.
I’ve been pulled over three times. I got tickets twice. The only time I didn’t was because I was friends/drinking buddies with the guy who pulled me over. All of that was more than 30+ years ago.
I’m back in Washington state where there are a bunch of kei trucks tooling around town. I never see them on the freeway where the speed limit is 55 or 60. And although I like the form factor of these little things, the fact that they are almost always right-hand drive, would be unsettling to me.
The NASCAR mess is interesting because so far all the witnesses are agreeing that the current charter agreement had them over the barrel. They said the agreements were presented to them late on a Friday and they had until Midnight to sign. That’s less time than it takes to run some of their races.
“The President Wants Tiny Cars”
The President is Lying.
“ What’s the best piece of unexpected good news that’s come out of the post-G8 cancellation world?”
So that would be the time since Russia left the G8 On 13 January 2017.
I would say that the adoption of BEVs is at a much higher rate than I ever imagined would happen back then.
Back then, the Tesla Model 3 was just getting launched and most automakers were still not taking BEVs seriously.
These days, seeing a modern BEV, including electric trucks, buses and other types of vehicles isn’t unusual.
I blame bizarro world on Hawaiian pizza. Once the devil convinced mankind it was okay to put pineapple and ham on a pie, there was no turning back.
Have you ever swapped the sad, limp ham with crispy bacon tho?
Or if you are feeling xtra fancy, adding some hot peppers too?
Salty, sweet, crunchy, [insert preferred textural adjective for cooked pineapple], all on the world’s best savory calorie delivery device.
Pineapple on pizza is one of God’s great gifts to man.
Pepperoni and pineapple is the absolute best combo. Far superior to ham! Throw them on a five cheese pizza for best results
bacon pineapple jalapeno pizza is absurdly good…
^This guy probably makes many solid decisions in his life.
Once the crust is past 1/4″ thick, you don’t even need pineapple to ruin it. Sorry Chicago, you don’t know shit. Stick to your Malort. And stop offering me that crap too already!
Festivus came early this year . . . we are airing our (food) grievances ahead of schedule.
I blame it on Ranch Dressing.
If ever there were a sure sign of End of Days, someone would order a deep-dish, Hawaiian pizza and dip the crust in ranch dressing. That person would probably then go to the grocery store and leave the cart in the parking lot just waiting for a car to dent. That someone would probably then go to the arctic to club baby seals.
“Hawaiian pizza and dip the crust in ranch dressing.”
Fun fact… I don’t mind Hawaiian Pizza and I don’t hate Ranch (even if it might be to blame).
And if someone dared me, I would take that pizza, dip it into the ranch and start chowing down to kick off the chain of events that brings The End.
Seriously. Ranch, a rotten, vile slop that tastes like it’s gone off from the start, is the real harbinger of the end times.
Fun fact… I don’t mind Hawaiian Pizza and I don’t hate Ranch (even if it might be to blame).
And if someone dared me, I would take that pizza, dip it into the ranch and start chowing down to kick off the chain of events that brings The End.
Buahahaha…
the conservation plan application is for Pulte Homes, family business of Bill Pulte, Director of Federal Housing Finance Agency. i suspect the application will be approved without delay.
Good ‘ole multi-billion-dollar family business. Like they need any help…
PulteGroup – Wikipedia
Hard for me to be against anything that loosens the France family’s grip on NASCAR.
I’m here for the drama.
Pull up a chair next to me.
I don’t know if it is good or bad, but one outcome is that I’ve been reevaluating my life’s choices about working in the auto industry. I find myself dreaming of a world with a pre-facebook internet, manual transmissions, and cars without screens. Maybe Griffiths had the same dream.
I’m visiting Denmark right now. It’s half like going back 5-10 years: my newish rental car has a manual transmission, key start and just a screen for the radio, restaurants are full and busy, a few bars still have indoor smoking, hardly any laptops in the cafes, tons of young people out socializing. It’s also half like living in a future: EVs everywhere in all sizes and applications, nearly everyone uses contactless payments instead of cash, and a beer is $12.
I would like to point out I made up the word ‘quintessence’ as a young boy before I ever knew it already existed. What a great word (signed Word Nerd).
“Let them eat(drive) Kei”
(Apologies if this was already stated in the original post, didn’t read all responses.)