>  >Civil disobedience (and I have no problem calling this act by that
>>name, since the goal is most definitely civic-minded)
>
>I wonder what the exact mechanics would be, because I think repo men would be
>dispatched immediately by GM.

Well, as long as you are volunteering to break the law, you could 
just do as Vince suggested and hide the car while offering to buy it. 
That's theft, but the assumption is that you feel strongly enough 
that the consequences are worth it.  Of course, you wouldn't want to 
involve anyone else in your hiding scheme, unless they, too, were 
prepared for the consequences as a co-conspirator.

If you hide the car well enough, you may not even go to jail, as a 
court could side with you and order GM to accept payment, and then 
simply impose the same punishment on you as on any other first-time 
thief.  That would require good lawyering, and certainly isn't an 
outcome you could rely on, but it is one distinct possibility.  You'd 
definitely need real commitment to the cause to even try it, though

David's "tie yourself to the car" approach could also work pretty 
well, as this would likely result in a couple of nights in jail and a 
relatively minor fine.  The publicity would be shorter-lived than a 
prolonged court battle, but the downside is much easier to take.

Anyone who would consider this should be aware that an attorney will 
be restricted in how he or she can advise you, as an attorney cannot 
actively assist in law-breaking.  An attorney can only tell you in a 
hypothetical way what the possibilities might be and what the law is, 
and then formally advise you not to engage in law-breaking behavior. 
A truly ethical attorney who issued the hypothetical advice would 
probably not want to take you on as a defendant, so as to remain 
distant from the implication that he or she was a co-conspirator.

>I wonder also if any consumer-rights organization would say that some would-be
>EV1 leasors were defrauded if GM deliberately delayed or prevented delivery of
>the vehicle?

There is very likely no cause of action here, as there is no contract 
or other enforceable relationship between the parties.  If GM were 
very formalistic about the way in which it accepted people onto its 
wait list and gave them some assurances that they were operating 
entirely on a first-come, first-served basis, there might be 
something.  Everything I've heard, though, is that GM did what it 
could to duck even having a waiting list (quite possibly for this 
very reason).  Where waiting lists were formed, they were very 
informal.  The presumption is that GM can sell to whomever it wants, 
whenever it wants, with some very carefully-carved exceptions (such 
as race-based preferences).  I very much doubt that there would be 
anything here that would fall into such an exception or could be seen 
as creating any enforceable obligation on the part of GM.

As for deliberately wasting people's time, the key word there is 
"deliberate".  You would have to prove that GM acted purposefully 
with the full intention of causing harm.  It's just not going to 
happen.  There's a lot of crummy stuff in life that we just have to 
put up with.  This is one of them.

-- 

-Adam Kuehn

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