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Editorial: Endangered Species -- May We Ask Why?
May 2nd, 2007

Editorial: Editorial: a Free Press
April 21st, 2007

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April 7th, 2007

Editorial: Another Delay in Dock Repair
March 5th, 2007

Editorial: Are Some Technological Wonders Economically Impractical?
February 27th, 2007

Editorial: Editorial: Weakest Tax Link Examined
December 22nd, 2006

Editorial: A New Year`s Resolution -- For the Levy County Commission
December 10th, 2006

Editorial: Political Tides
November 17th, 2006

Editorial: Blue Pencil Needed on Levy County Budget
October 30th, 2006

Editorial: Fiscal Incompetence?
October 2nd, 2006

Editorial: Paddlers May Get Hit in Pocket
September 18th, 2006

Editorial: Time for Another Cedar Key Tea Party?
August 30th, 2006

Editorial: Automotive Turning Point
August 11th, 2006

Editorial: Are There Limits to Southern Hospitality?
July 24th, 2006

Editorial: Armadillos and Anthros
July 9th, 2006

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Editorial: Henry Ford, American Genius

Editorial: Henry Ford, American Genius

Editorial


Henry Ford famously said, "History is bunk!" Ford had no appreciation for history, but he was certainly an historic figure. Ford revolutionized automobile manufacturing with the moving assembly line of Model T`s In 1914. That same year he instituted a minimum wage that allowed his workers enough income to buy a new Model T with just ninety day`s wages.


Henry Ford was never accused of being a liberal. In fact he was anti-semitic, cozy with the Nazi Party and sweepingly autocratic. He was a conservative with an innovative idea that promoted economic growth. The minimum wage was, and still is, fought by conservative partisans.


Today`s minimum wage does not let a wage earner buy an economy car with ninety day`s wages. To be fair, much of a new car`s costs are government imposed safety equipment such as effective brakes, safety glass, seat belts, turn signals, etc. Government "intrusion" in the manufacture of automobiles has saved many lives. (Government intrusion recently saved General Motors from financial collapse, but that is another editorial.) The minimum wage and safety devices are good ideas, regardless of the idea`s sources.


Henry Ford deserves credit for making cars affordable, although he was vilified by luxury car manufacturers. Likewise, Ralph Nader deserves credit for making cars safer. Yet Nader was defamed by the automotive industry, and particularly General Motors, for his call for seat belts. Concern for quarterly earnings determine industry goals and lobbying expenditures.


Innovations such as a minimum wage disturb special interests that want to preserve the status quo. New ideas deserve consideration for their long-term effects. That consideration should include recognition of who opposes the new idea.

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