I agree wheel spacers are not a bolt on death sentence,but,I will never believe that a car with aftermarket wheel spacers is 100% as safe as it was when it rolled off the assembly line. It is adding one more failure point,2 mounting surfaces vs. 1.On the fronts of vehicles,the extra leverage affects the spring rate, fasteners,and load on the front end components,including the frame and steering box, just like using a longer pry bar. The difference in length from the ball joints changes the steering geometry and the scrub radius which reduces traction in turns. But most of these same problems happen with just the wrong wheel and tire combination. Factory spacers are part of the designed suspension,remove them and you will cause problems as well. Not trying to start an argument,just want everyone to think of the not so obvious,like even a hubcentric spacer is not the same as running a hub centric wheel designed for the application. With the wheel it would be to absorb shear loads in a straight up and down plane, with the offset of the spacer it's no longer a straight plane from the wheel to the hub,now there is leverage trying to pull the bottom of the spacer away from the hub. I have in the past,am now,and will in the future run spacers in some situations,but I know it comes with some risk.