I am absolutely convinced that nearly every actual unintential acceleration claim on Toyota has at least some blame on driver error. They were bland enough to buy a Beige Camry anyways, so they probably have no idea what's going on, which leads me to point #2:
Yes, every normal modern car with discs can "out-stop" itself, and Edmund's Inside Line did the test (with Car & Driver following up in print), at least the first time. When you combine a runaway accelerator (due to floor mat, poor design/quality pedal assembly, or gremlins or some combination thereof) with a person that has had exactly no actual driver training on a car that is likely already on worn pads and rotors that squeal, and have the same person panic and slam the brakes on and off, they WILL fail. That will happen with any car.
Which brings me back to why I posted it. I absolutely believe that there is three sides to every story, and I refuse to believe that Toyota needed their scanner plugged into every car to install a metal sliver in the crap-tastic plastic POS pedal. They know there's an actual issue, NASA found it (along with that Professor dude last year), and 'Yota has been caught trying to cover it up. Did the gremlin kill people? Probably not, that was their own fault (or rather society's lack of properly training them to pilot a 2-ton death machine on wheels), but it doesn't mean the problem isn't there.
Michael Pinto - 73 AMC Javelin 360 / GoKart / 86 944 Sport / 01 Grand Prix GT / 06 Mazda5 M5