Buying your newly-licensed kid a sports car is most certainly optional.
You have to explain to me a relevance of a sports car in this discussion.
In all the fatality stats, sports cars are included.
Anyway, I'm pretty sure, if we exclude all the other cars and keep stats for sports cars only, comparison of odds among driving a sports car and sailing solo circumnavigating the Earth, will be favorable to sports car.
Lets look at the car lots of young people (teenagers) drive. Honda Civic.
In 70s when first generation of Honda Civic was sold in US, the smallest engine had output of about 50hp.
Today it has 140hp. Performance wise, it's equal with many entry level performance cars of the 70s.
Yet somehow today's teens are driving safer than '70s teens.
As such, can we really say that performance of the car is responsible for unsafe driving? Or is it rather lack of experience?
I contend it is more irresponsible for a parent to buy their teen a sports car than to let them chase a dangerous (to themselves) dream.
Why? Why is something which is safer and affordable suddenly more irresponsible? Please, explain that to me.
And what if sport car is their dream?
Aren't those type of cars a dream to more teenagers than it is some other dangerous activity like climbing Mount Everest or sailing solo around the globe?