Unfortunately, things aren’t always black and white. We all wrestle, and come to terms with, the ethical choices we make.
We say we are “restoring” a car, which normally means putting it back to its “original” condition. But how many of us have:
- Replaced a single master cylinder with a dual one?
Changed the body color?
Installed power steering where there was originally none?
Created paint daubs for parts based upon others reports?
Or the thousands of other choices we make when we get into these types of projects.
Sometimes things are just unknown, and remain so. And we take a leap of faith. Other times we make choices that we know to be incorrect – justified to ourselves for the purposes of safety, or personal preference.
A personal story:
I wanted to trace the history of my car back to the original owner and selling dealer. I bought an original owner’s warranty card off Ebay with the intent of replacing the owner and ID# with the appropriate ones for my car. I hired a private investigator to trace the history with the DMV in Connecticut. I know the car was registered there in the mid-eighties. As it turns out, Connecticut is a non-disclosure state and will not release the information due to privacy laws. I have come to a point where I may never know the original owner or dealer.
I do know that my late father-in-law, Buddy, owned the car in 1986, but that’s as far back as I can go. We loved him dearly and miss him every day. I have considered placing his name on the owner’s card, even though I know he wasn’t the “original” owner. A tribute of sorts, I suppose. Now, I’m certainly not breaking any laws by making such a choice. And it would only provide some measure of personal gratification. But it’s still an ethical choice I must come to terms with. I would be literally re-writing history.
The point is, there are junctures in our lives where we all probably wander into these gray areas to some lesser or greater extent. And justify our decisions in some manner to appease our conscience. The moral boundary of those decisions often lies at that point where our decisions have the potential to do harm to another. Up to that point, there are all different shades of what’s ethical.