You did see where he said he was keeping his v10 ford. Didn't you? I'm all for civil discussion about which truck a wants, and this has been more civil than just about any other truck thread that I've been involved in, but if you're trying to sway the guys opinion, I think it's a lost cause.
Today's 1/2 ton trucks are close to 3/4 ton trucks of 20 years ago, in towing capacity. I agree with that. Numbers don't lie.(not usually...) Throw a pallet of bricks in the back of each and it's an entirely different story.
I also agree with the fact that most guys get way more truck than they need. Most guys have way more guns that the need too. Nobody begrudges them that though!

Truck threads are very seldom 100% need based and minimum anything is not where I want to be when it comes to towing things. You wreck one time and injure yourself or your family and you'll never forgive yourself for trying to get by with just enough. Over kill is never really over kill when you're on the highway with a load going 65+. In the winters I drive truck for a living. I see it way too often where a guy is towing a trailer that is within the trucks specs but isn't loaded right and is in my opinion unsafe. Sure they might not have a problem 99% of the time, but, if you're involved in the 1% the other 99 doesn't matter a bit. I can't count the number of avoidable accidents I've seen involving someone towing more than they should since I've been on the road. When I first started it was 3500-4000 miles a week most times and in ever type of traffic and weather.
That brings me to a point that was made that I don't agree with but don't have the numbers to back up so I'll say it as my opinion. While there are a large number of Dodge/Rams that are delivering trailers; it's far from 90%. Dodge had a good thing going with the Cummins for a lot of years, but, as someone else stated, when they stepped up to the plate to meet the newest emissions standards, they started having problems like the rest of them. One of the biggest draw for these guys wasn't actually the cummins in recent years. It was the fact that dodge was the last one to offer a standard transmission. When you're on the road for a living avoiding the potential problem of a blown transmission is a major part of a truck purchase. Sure all these autos put in these trucks and take a bit of hauling, some better than others. Not all of them fair well when they have all their life. That was the problem for all the manufacturers at one time or another.