Alaskan - You can't even trust escalators these days:
Escalator in Rome collapses
Looks terrifying... and oddly, has stuck in my memory.
I'm not a car guy either, but I do prefer older ones which are reliable. In my experience, 5-7 years on the market seems to settle that question. Since I got my first car as a teenager, I only pay in cash, in full. I've only bought 3 cars in quite a long time for a total that is still far less than a new one... including any repairs. 10-15 years out of a reliable make (after I buy used) has been pretty reasonable for me. It's all about basic maintenance and selecting something that has been weeded out by the masses.
My brother in law once tried to convince me to lease. "Warranty, full service, free repairs, Gee-whiz stereo, GPS, etc., etc."
So, we did the math. I either have a knack for picking excellent cars, which is doubtful, or the lease system (and most new cars) are just a way to throw out a load of money. He spent awhile after that napkin math saying "Huh... well... huh... oh... uhhh... huh." I don't remember the exact tally difference, except that it was very, very high, and not in his favour.
Seeing what most new cars are, they're not very impressive. A new Toyota, Honda, Ford, whatever, looks pretty ordinary and middle class doldrums to me (no offence, I drive an older middle class doldrum car myself), yet they have considerable price tags that probably should get some luxury, but don't.
I understand a new Porsche, Lamborghini, Ferrari, etc. and people being protective of that. My neighbour eyeballing me when I get too close to his Mazda? Not so much. It will be in a junk yard in ten years... or maybe, resold in Eastern Europe.
There just seems to be far more interesting things to spend a big chunk of money on. At least for me anyway.