In discussing no-fault insurance in any Law Review article, undoubtedly one with legal training undertakes the task with more than ordinary trepidation as, unfortunately, no one is able to fortify any position he might take with elaborate legal citations. Nonetheless, as a West Virginia lawyer, as president of a West Virginia-domiciled insurance company predominantly writing what future historians might some day call auto fault insurance, and as a citizen, this legal dissertation might be more properly classed as a sharing of some of my thoughts as to where we stand, and what legislative steps might ultimately prove in our best interests. The logic of using the fault system as the basis for automobile accident reparations is the subject of...