> My hypothesis is that the people who seek out and buy cars that go 0 to 60 in 3.2 seconds probably drive faster and more aggressively than average
Highly unscientific anecdotal evidence and personal experience living in an area with an unusually high concentration of such cars shows me that most people that own really fast cars do drive fast and enthusiastically from time to time but do so in a responsible manner and typically respectfully go with the flow, whereas a lot of people with more regular cars (mostly MPVs around here) have a habit of driving a good deal too close and a good deal too fast every single day. Many even engage in some truly reckless behaviour as soon as they feel threatened/frustrated, a telltale sign of power/control issues.
Highly unscientific anecdotal evidence and personal experience living in an area with an unusually high concentration of such cars shows me that most people that own really fast cars do drive fast and enthusiastically from time to time but do so in a responsible manner and typically respectfully go with the flow, whereas a lot of people with more regular cars (mostly MPVs around here) have a habit of driving a good deal too close and a good deal too fast every single day. Many even engage in some truly reckless behaviour as soon as they feel threatened/frustrated, a telltale sign of power/control issues.