Of course certain standard compel certain things, which is fundamentally unConstitutional. There is no freedom anymore, its gone. The smart are punished, the users are punished, the innocent hurt, the gov on the other hand lives deliciously with money garnished under force.
Of course there are those who would be outraged at a machine that can not spin or give precise temps. Thats where personal choice comes in. Where a person can choose if he wants a TOL machine, a budget machine, one the cleans, one the lasts, one the is quiet, big, small or the like. Government can not interfere with that.
Long before Thomas revealed the Niagra, I proposed a similar no spin timer controlled budget machine. I was told the clothes would be sopping wet, no one would buy it, energy regs would not allow it, ect. Come an year latter the Niagra is selling off the shelf and most users report that the clothes are not dripping wet. Wet, but not to horribly wet.
Being honest, if I may, I see unnecessarily excessive complexity US and EU machines, where as South American machines for example are much more simple for the same amount of work that they do.
But that is not may concern really, or the focal point of the matter, rather I like to toy with the idea of new and various improvements to existing designs. Have engineering debates and hypothetical discussions. Ideally I wish I could also pilot test machines in a lab or my own home, but that is a bit of a far reach.