VW never actually "lied." The government simply said cars will be tested to see if they meet minimum federal emissions standards. VW figured out a way around that. It would be one thing if the consumer was really being cheated or harmed. In this case, they totally were not. They got a vehicle that drove well and achieved excellent fuel economy. The environment in the US also benefited. The EPA was embarrassed and decided to use the opportunity to punish and advance a different agenda. Nobody bought a TDI because they were so pleased at how low NOx emissions were. Nobody even knew what NOx was prior to this debacle. People bought the TDI because of its excellent fuel economy, and unlike a Prius actually looked nice and drove nice. Nobody was cheated, and anyone who though pulling the TDIs off the road was to protect the US environment is a fool.The point in that VW story, I believe, is that VW cheated and lied.... and cheaters/liars should be called-out regardless of any “benefit” they claim. (BTW, the “benefit” claimed was mostly large profits into their own coffers. The fines/penalties deprived them the profit from their cheating.). Seems fair to me.
There are literally tens of thousands of older diesel vehicles still on the road, from pickups all the way up to 18 wheelers. The kid next door who uses a 20 year old Ford F-250 with a 7.3L diesel Powerstroke to run his lawn mowing business emits more NOx is a year than a TDI will emit in 10 years. But of course, the old pickup is perfectly legal. People need to think for themselves and stop letting the government pull the wool over their eyes.