I am, or was a car guy. I couldn't wait to get my licence. I restored old sports cars on a shoestring budget, I bought and made tools to extract engines and re-build suspension. I drove hard, but not crazy hard. I drove everywhere. When my business made money I bought a Porsche, then another one. But at the same time changes were happening on the road. Speed cameras everywhere, traffic everywhere, parking a complete nightmare. I started riding my bike to any appointment less than 20km's away. I now very rarely drive, and when I take the Porsche out, its still enjoyable, but the traffic is still there, and the parking is still awful.
I look forward to a future where cars are a rent-as-you need commodity, and the large proportion of under-skilled drivers are relieved of the task of guiding their two tonnes of metal and plastic safely through congested streets.
Of the kids I know who are just old enough to be driving, there is a distinct lack of interest. They don't see the car as the symbol of and means to achieve freedom that I did at their age. I have to think that I was on the arse end of the American Graffiti era, where cars marked a right of passage. I am pretty happy about this, I think in general cars have been a necessary evolutionary step, but we have the technology to replace the model where every family has two cars doing nothing for 90% of the time.
The idea that there is a new future where mechanised mobility is still readily available and convenient but car ownership is rare makes perfect sense.