All very distressing - but true!
I think the common experience,underlying all this disappointment and resentment, is that we've all enjoyed the unforgettable experience of British sports cars of the 50s and 60s.
The problem is that we were all carried along by the folklore surrounding the names -MG, Jaguar, Austin Healey,Triumph and the rest - forgetting that the reputations of these names had been made in the 30s and 40s, when they were all independent companies run by talented people of creativity and skill.
Sadly, by the 50s, they had all been engulfed by corporate giants; and whilst American, Japanese, and even German corporations were run by professionally trained managers, ours were run by bloody idiots who had been Generals - with no idea how to deal with any group of workers, let alone some of the poisonous Trotskyites that had infiltrated the trades unions at that time.
So instead of concentrating on quality, and customer satisfaction, these fools took the view that "Johnny foreigner should think himself jolly lucky that we allow him to buy our cars at all - not be moaning about not being able to get spare parts all the time!"
Then they were surprised when the Datsun 240Z all but extinguished E-types in USA.
Hey ho! At least we've got lots of horror stories to tell our grandchildren.
David.