Nowadays the electronic nannys keep that from happening on road. You can feel the back start to step out, and immediately the ESP brings it right back. Low range disengages all the safeties.
I haven't owned a Jeep in decades but periodically rent them, especially before retiring, and it has been interesting to see the slow addition of those "electronic nannys" over time.
We rented a 3 year old 35,000 mile Wrangler in Hawaii a few weeks ago and the whole experience was bad because we went through three Budget rentals in a week. I'd reserved a Wrangler and they said they had none when we arrived, despite
eight sitting right outside the office. All eight had "issues to be corrected" we were told and that should've been a clue to ask for something else. They finally gave us a 2(?) year old Jeep pickup that looked like it had been beat, especially with the dirt & salt stained interior. My lady was not thrilled with the dirt and me knowing how tight parking can be in town and more maneuverable the Wrangler is I tried to trade it for a Wrangler the next morning when tourists were catching their outbound flights. It took the girl at the rental office a while to "find" one and it turned out to be 4 years old with something like 42,000 miles. It looked even more beat from 4 years of being a rental and looking it over I rejected it because the front right tire had no tread on the outer half and the left showed it was also clearly out of alignment.
Finally got a 2 year old hardtop with something like 24,000 miles, so things were looking up, despite it also being salt stained inside. The next morning when we were about to leave the rented condo the key fob wouldn't unlock it so I used the key blade then the burglar alarm went off, getting people in the condos above to come out on their balconies at 7am. As I'm looking for a way to stop it my lady looked on Google and found we "just" had to press the key fob on the start button while pressing the brake pedal. Called Budget and they said they had no Jeeps to replace it so we decided to keep it for the beach and some planned gravel trips. Since we had stuff to lock in the car during the day, I got to where I could unlock the door with the key, get my foot on the brake, and press the starter button with the burglar alarm honking only three times.
Then we bought some groceries we put in the back and when we took them out found them covered in ants, which is not a Jeep thing but added to the experience. Then we had to learn about the relation of buckling the seatbelts and making sure ALL doors were tight because it had an "auto park" nanny. What a pain in the a$$.
Hard to believe how tired those three Jeeps were with the relatively low mileage they had, especially with years of living with two fairly high mileage Foresters, a CRV, and Ford pickups. When I turned in the Jeep the guy said most of the ones sitting around parked also had "issues" for similar minor stuff. Ahh well, long story because the experience is so fresh and I'm sure most owners don't treat their Jeeps like those rentals. Regardless, we'll probably rent something else next time.