Originally posted by M5Power
I'm going to take this opportunity to make fun of the rest of you.

It's a family car. Nobody cares how fast it is in a quarter mile. Go drift.
Ever heard of the Subaru Legacy? Why do family sedans need 'plenty of power'?
No. Slightly worse than the Mazda 6, which I used to have a high opinion of. Both cars are compromises, especially in your price range.
I'm not sure which BMW - certainly not any new one. This coming from a very consistent Lincoln LS supporter, incidentally.
I won't go after the comment before this because it's easier to prove you wrong there. The Altima and Maxima both have fuel economy to the high side of their respective classes. "Cheap interior" is a parroted comment from somebody who's only read the magazine articles.
Oh, Bluetooth technology and a cool sound system! Now we've justified the $8000 price difference over the V6 Accord.
And when you realise the Honda Accord EX-L is a near-luxury car, you would hopefully pick that.
It is roomier than a TL... but it still falls behind an Accord EX-L. So does the Passat. Perhaps there's a recurring theme here.
I agree with some of your points but there are some few flaws.
Regarding your 4th reply:
I got high praises too with the Mazda6 but, if they just abandon the Ford Taurus (Duratec V6) engine and it will be the perfect family sedan.
6th reply:
Okey, I maybe wrong with the fuel mileage, but I just don't read magazines, I research them thouroughly. I go to auto shows twice a year and those remarks from the magazines are correct, the interiors matirials are quite cheap compared to the last generation but not as worst as the new Chevy Malibu.
7th reply:
Bro, the Accord (EX-L w/Navi) doesn't even have the Bluetooth and the 8-speaker sound system.
8th reply:
For your info, that everybody would disagree you that the Accord is a near-luxury sedan (unlike in some 3rd world countries, and in Japan as the Honda Inspire). The EX-L V6 sedan is still considered as a mid-size class category, not all cars that has a faux wood triming, leather seats, and a navigation system can be considered as a near-luxury car (prime example: Mazda3 s).
9th reply:
The G35 is a very good car, no doubt about that. But the TL is a tad more roomier than the G35. Besides I seperated the FWD, RWD, and AWD into seperate groups in the near-luxury class. But if you're into RWD I'll pick the G35 and the 330i anytime than the IS300 and the CTS. FWD, Acura TL and Lexus ES330 than Saab 9-3.