Well, if you are going to be prick about it with your obnoxious '!', I'm going to respond appropriately.
Ah, well, my Mazda is a 1997 626LX 2.0L (they made a 2.4L too, but my dad bought the 2.0L). I inherited the Mazda, well, my dad stopped driving and he gave it to me. My Mom's BMW went to my sister.
Mazda only offered the 1997 626 with 2.0 4 cylinder and 2.5 V6
I drive 1/2 as much as you, and since pandemic (and I don't play golf suddenly) way less even, around 300m/year!. I actually am quad skating 5x as far as I'm driving these days.
So you have very little current driving experience. Driving is a use it or lose affair.
I guess the Mazda isn't the sexiest car but TBH I really like it. It handles really well. I'm sure one reason my dad bought it is it was literally 2 tons, so it's relatively solid should there be an accident. The way I drive, an accident is unlikely.
A 626LX is a around 3000lbs, not 4000 lbs. That is a significant difference.
Before I had the Mazda I had a 1983 Town and Country that my uncle gave me (it had been his). That thing drove like an aircraft carrier. I mean, horrible. The car I had before that (20 years before that, I went 20 years without a car... just bicycles and walking) was a Triumph TR4. Now that was FUN! Fate took her from me, I will not elaborate. No, it was not an accident. I will not explain...
An Aircraft carrier handles very differently than Chrysler Le Baron Town and Country. Most likely, the issue with the 1983 you drove (assuming you are not an old man and drove it when it was new) was a lack of maintenance on the suspension and judging by your driving experience you would not recognize the difference between design short comings and owner negligence. In it's day, when brand new and judged among its peers and typical driver experience, the handling would have been judged average.
As for the TR4, I'm actually surprised you can drive manual.
Well, the only other cars I owned were a '57 Chevy I bought used for $200 on Maui, that had the back seat removed and a piece of plywood with a mattress in back, so it was effectively a camper. Sweet days! Before that, my first car, a VW bug. I liked it, but it suffered a totaling collision, thanks to a friend who turned out to be no so good a friend after all. He wasn't supposed to take my car much less crash it.
57 Chevy's are horrific. There is nothing redeeming aside from styling on any of Chevy's line up from 1957 unless you are an old man who goes around saying that the Honeymooners was the funniest show on television and what real comedy should be.
TBH, I have no car envy that bothers me. I think at times "I've never driven a Porsche, I'd like to have a classic 911." But then I think of the impracticality. My coupe is pretty practical. Besides, like you in the DCMA, I'd have trouble finding places to enjoy driving a Porsche. Not as much as you, but I have to face it, there's a lot more traffic on the roads these days than when I had my TR4.
You own a 626 which is a 4dr, not a coupe.
I don't identify with my car. Hell, I'd like a camper, but where would I put it? A pickup too, ditto. I used to figure my next car would drive itself while I took a nap or read a book or watched a movie. Now I'm not so sure, but figure my next car will definitely not burn petroleum. You know, the global warming crisis.
Trains.
What you should investigate are trains.
Concerning a VW, I figure that scandal of them cheating on emissions systems makes them look pretty damn iffy in general. I took my Mazda for my every other week Costco trip today. Washed it first. The Japanese really gave that car a great paint job. It's amazing how good it looks after a cursory wash. I stopped washing with soap or waxing it 15 years ago, it lives outside and still looks great.
VW, Mercedes, Ford, Chrysler, General Motors, Suzuki, Honda, Nissan and Mitsubishi have all been found to employ cheats on their Diesels.
Toyota and Nissan violated the Clean air act.
I owned a Mazda MX-6, the coupe version of the 626, the Ford Probe GT, built at the same plant as the MX-6 and 626 and also the same generation and platform as your 626.
My wife drove the Mazda6, the car that replaced your 626. Also built in the same plant as the cars just listed. That plant was in Flat Rock, Michigan.
The paint was nothing special.