Just to follow up- for those interested. Once traction control has been introduced on a vehicle, the manufacturer has to make it a conscious decision to turn it off. You see there are a certain group of people who are litigious- it's just too expensive to have class action lawsuits because somebody lost control on acceleration and had a bad accident. I grew up racing motorcycles and cars and have had more than my share of tail-happy sports cars. That doesn't apply to most people, and honestly, if my daughter drives my 400hp 3-row SUV and decides to try to beat someone at a left turn stoplight, I'm happy there are some electronic aids (they are NOT perfect mind you) to try to keep her out of trouble.
The very best traction control is a vehicle with less than 100 hp! My ancient '73 Karman-Ghia that I had in college comes to mind.
It was not only glacially slow, but abysmal at braking. Anything above 60 mph was a rather white knuckle experience as you knew you could face death at any moment. Handling? Non-existent. Understeer, oversteer? None to speak of as the chassis was made of jello (it was a convertible). Probably the safest car you could ever drive since there was no way that you didn't have your head on a swivel and anticipate every corner, stop, merge, and on-ramp way in advance. Sometimes minutes in advance. Everyone looking for a learner's permit should start in that car!