I hate tobeata dead horse, but Quagmire is off the mark. There are standards associated with every part of a car, and the ETC and ABS brake systems are included. Heavy trucks are NOT cars,and are not driven in the same manner. Just like ABS, truck-proven ETC should not have been applied to cars. The first automotive (vs HD truck) ABS systems had LOTS of issues, and their use was not even allowed at first, due to the nature and scope of the problems in their application in cars. The fact that serious acceleration problems have not been associated with ETC systems in other makes is not proof of their reliability or safety. It merely proves that the issues affecting Toyota are not the issues affecting other makes. This is not to say that there are not issues, just that the issues are not exactly the same as Toyota's. Attempting to compare aircraft fly-by-wire systems to automotive ones is an egregious example of comparing apples to oranges. There are NO redundant backup systems on cars, and NO training of the drivers to deal with emergencies, not even at the professional level of police and fire equipment drivers. NOBODY has been prepared for this technology in our motor vehicles, and we are finding out the hard way. As for slanted reporting, I think that is also somewhat unfair. I heard plenty about the Liberty recall, and who can forget the 2007 Ford diesel fiasco? Any 2007 6.4L diesel owners out there? I thought not. Removing mechanical connection between the driver and his controlled components that affect vehicle safety (engine, brakes, trans, steering) is a mistake, plain and smple. The fact that all cars now produced have ETC shouldn't make you think of Toyota so much as the bad guy, as much as it should make you wonder when the rest of the national fleet will have catastrophic failure. As for hydraulic brakes being similar in concept to ETC, this is also off the mark. Brakes were forced to go dual-circuit in 1965, due to the lack of a backup system. The parking brake will indeed slow a vehicle from even 90 MPH, but will require a significant amount of time and space to do it. For this reason, Ford lost a lawsuit in the 1950s, and the term "emergency brake" was removed from the official automotive lexicon. For the entire history of the automobile, safety and sense have always been afterthoughts, and we have to suffer because of it. Don't like where tech nology is going? Don't buy a new car. It's the only alternative, and will soon be removed as an option, if the Feds get their way. They don't want us in old cars, and would rather that we had no control at all over the new ones. Watch "Minority Report" for a good example of where the world is supposed to go, if the "plan" is followed.