Just wanted to comment about how distinguishing between foreign and domestic nowadays is increasingly fuzzy. Many Hondas and Toyota models sold in the U.S. are built at plants in the U.S. (including the original poster's Odyssey and my Sienna for example, as well as the Camry and Accord).
Some even have higher U.S. content than so-called "American" models built here or in plants in Mexico and Canada. My U.S. built Sienna has more domestic content than the '03 Saturn Vue it replaced, lol. So far my old Vue and current Sienna are tied with one recall campaign each and I personally encountered no other reliability issues over roughly the same length of ownership for either vehicle.
Toyota has also had a significantly larger number of recalls this year.
A recent "Sienna owner heads up" thread was posted here by a WSJ subscriber when the WSJ ran an article about Toyota's recall woes and the same article hinted another Sienna recall may be in the works, sigh.
Before the Sienna, all of my previous cars have been "American," mainly '90s Saturn S-series models, but also an '81 Escort, '88 Pontiac LeMans, and '88 Grand Am before Saturns were on the market. None of the non-Saturns were statistical bastions for reliability according to Consumer Reports (neither was the Vue for that matter). But I only had mechanical/reliability issues with the LeMans, and that is putting it mildly, lol. Technically the '88 Pontiac LeMans wasn't really "American" either because it was designed by Opel in Europe and built in South Korea. I had the LeMans for 9 months and got rid of it after numerous problems, including a scary episode of sudden acceleration.
Would I buy a "domestic" again? If it had the safety equipment and crash scores I mentioned in my earlier post in this thread, if my kid's carseats installed properly in it, and if DH has adequate headroom, lol, then yes I would consider it. To me those factors are more significant than a car's origin or brand. In fact if we could swing replacing DH's car right now, we would probably go with a Chevy Malibu or Malibu Maxx as opposed to say an '07 Camry. DH's head was jammed up against the '07 Camry's ceiling when he tried it for size, and this was also true in some surprisingly larger cars like the Avalon, but he fits fine in the Malibu.