The USA GP turned out to be a farce. One of the tyre manufacturers failed to have an adequate set of tyres for the weekend, and only 3 teams competed in the race, leading to crowd trouble in one of the worst weekends in F1 history.
Motor racing is dangerous. It's that danger that draws people to the sport. The sport can never be made completely safe. F1 races in the past, have been run in torrential rain, run on weekends of major global disasters, run during earthquakes, yet F1 millionaire drivers can't drive a race because one corner of a track is deemed unsuitable for a tyre to race on, and there was apparantly, no possibility to consider any alternative options, for the sport's sake.
Tbh, this kind of thing has been coming for a long time. Schumacher's dominance of the sport in recent times, has led to many changes in the rules. The old qualifying sessions were interfered with. Then qualifying became effectively part of the race. Then engine use was restricted. Then in-car technical devices were banned. Then tyre use was restricted, in order to not only cut costs, but to attract more people to watch races. The teams only care about what's best for them, not what's best for the fans, or the sport. There is no Plan B considered for exceptional circumstances like what happened at the USA GP. The rulebook must be adhered to at all times, or else.
For the record, Schumacher notched up his first win of the season. But the GP itself was not a race, it was a joke.

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