But you know what's even more sad about this whole thing? I'll still ride and buy HDs for the rest of my riding days, even with the problems.
And what's even more sad is that the MoCo knows this and they just sit up on their non-oil-leaking ivory tower in Milwaukee and pretend that there isn't any problem. 

I know. We tell folks half jokingly that "if I have to explain it you wouldn't understand." But we can't even understand it ourselves some of the time. We just keep on keeping on.
Part of it is Pavlovian. We're historically used to having to deal with bike issues. At least those that have ridden long enough to know that not all Harleys have belt drives. And when systems were simpler, when a distributor could be tweaked on the side of the road, that was a different issue.
Failures now are terminal though. These things shut down on a shoulder just outside of BFE and you ain't making it go with pliers and a matchbook cover. Modern automotive reliability standards are such that competence suggests what we endure with the bikes is unnecessary. That being so there are choices made somewhere between reliability and bottom line. It is sadly unfortunate that when pausing to consider that choice the ivory towered soul isn't appropriately concerned that it's our bottoms on that line when the machines fail.
I wish people would get so fed up they'd ride something else. The company (to borrow a term from a bygone era with a better meaning then) righteously deserves that they would. But the old farts like us won't. Thank god for the more critical and actually more discerning trailing generations. They'll have the nads to buy something based on whether it's actually good or not. Not whether they have to make it that way themselves after the fact.