See, I don't really understand the lingering distrust of American cars. Sure, they were total shitboxes in the 80s and early 90s, but they're solid cars now. Well, Fords are anyway, GM's have always been suspect. More importantly I think, you can still work on them, they're not explicitly disposable (anymore). That said, I do inherently distrust Japanese cars, but that's more because I've never seen one whose performance I was satisfied with, even with around-town cars, and their engineering leaves something to be desired when they do break down.
Even so, the two most reliable cars I've ever seen are my father's Thunderbird and my mother's Acura CL, so it's all really a question of taste and experience.
Acura is the luxury Honda brand. My aunt has had one now for 10+ years, and she runs it around like an idiot, and it still works somewhat well. I'm surprised, because I've checked it for her when she told me it was making weird noises only to find that she was running on ZERO brake fluid. How she managed to drive it to me without dying is a testament to Acuras. She also owns a prius.
Well, my own personal experience as far as our family car history goes:
ancient 70s Volk bug: shitty, unsafe, but cheap. Sold in the 80s
1986 volvo GLE: Built like a tank. Only thing that could take it out is a hummer or semi. It was hit by a SUV and the SUV was worse off for it. Great for awhile, then sinking more money into it than it's worth/the tax break we'd get donating it when the suspension gave out after about 20+ years of use. Volvos are great if you want to protect your kids in an armoured vehicle.
1994 honda accord manual: Sold it 2 years ago through Craigslist with 200k+ miles. Probably will last above 300k.
2000 toyota camry: still used by my mum, works great, tuneups required every once in awhile. About 119k miles
2001 toyota matrix: My car. Family loved it so much we bought another one. 110k+miles.
2005 toyota matrix: still in use by my father. We joke about it being his mid-life crisis car. He can easily afford any car he wants but doesn't give a shit.
Then of course there's my extended family and friends... but I can tell you that our toyotas and that honda are the most dependable cars I know of. And as far as I've seen the engineering is such that it's easy and cheap to fix. Not so with many others. But the recent Fords do look a bit nice, so I'd just have to wait and see how well they hold up.
What I find interesting is that following the government takeover of GM that big "Toyota causing runaway accidents" thing was blown up in the media when Ford had a similar issue with people dying due to slow recalls and that was merely settled in court without a huge media scandal.