This definitely reflects Suzuki automotive's timid nature and why we will probably never see a bold 'out of the box' vehicle from them again.
I didn't see it as representative of Suzuki's timid nature, but rather as a necessary precaution, given their history with the likes of consumer reports & more likely driven by the perhaps "litigious" nature of American society.
By way of explanation - I'm a "non US national" who has cause to the visit the US frequently, and who uses the opportunity to compare the differences between life in the US and in the Caribbean - to give just one example, you won't/don't see our vehicles with the side mirrors warning that objects "are closer than they appear" - something that I have seen on the mirrors of every US rental car I've driven.
Whilst waiting for my wife, I sit & read the owner's manuals of the rental cars, they are filled with various warnings, what to do, what not to - adjust the seats & the mirrors before moving off, don't adjust the radio whilst driving, etc., - warnings, many of which, do not appear in the manuals of the same vehicles when sold outside of the US - this has led to one of my daughters (who has actually lived in the US for several years) making the statement that "Americans must be stupid" - they have to be told everything.
I'm not going to be as rude as my daughter, I'm sure she didn't mean to be rude, it was, after all, the observation of a child, so, as they say "out of the mouths of babes" - what I want to ask is "do Americans really need to be protected from themselves?" Do they really need to be told that coffee is hot & can burn them - and yes, I am aware of the details of the McDonald's case - when all is said & done, the actual temperature of the coffee is not the issue - she DID attempt to hold a cup of coffee, which she KNEW was hot, between her knees - it was a decision she made - and as a result, she got burned.