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Behind the Aegis

(55,946 posts)
13. He was a raging anti-Semite.
Sat Nov 9, 2013, 03:38 PM
Nov 2013

The International Jew is a four volume set of booklets or pamphlets originally published and distributed in the early 1920s by Henry Ford, an American industrialist and automobile manufacturer.

In Spring 1920, Henry Ford made his personal newspaper The Dearborn Independent chronicle what he considered the "Jewish Menace". Every week for 91 issues, the paper exposed in a headline, some sort of Jewish-inspired evil major story. The most popular and aggressive stories were then chosen to be reprinted by Ford into four volumes called the "International Jew". [1]

It is to be distinguished from The International Jew: The World's Problem which was the headline in The Dearborn Independent and is the name of a collection of articles serialized in The Dearborn Independent. It is also to be distinguished from the title of the first volume of the series, namely The International Jew, The World's Foremost Problem (note the absence or presence of the word "Foremost" as the distinguishing mark in the subtitle).

more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_International_Jew


When you have some free time, you should read it. It's a hoot (in a bad way, but it is so over the top).

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

everything I've ever read dlwickham Nov 2013 #1
Me too. ScreamingMeemie Nov 2013 #3
He was a raging anti-Semite. Behind the Aegis Nov 2013 #13
Wow... How amazing is it that I spent 27 years living within 20 miles ScreamingMeemie Nov 2013 #22
He bankrolled the publication of the "Protocols" libel Recursion Nov 2013 #26
Henry Ford was a brilliant business person, but he was a corrosive ant-semite and bluestate10 Nov 2013 #30
Henry Ford increased wages because he couldn't get employees without doing it. Taitertots Nov 2013 #2
To work at Ford motors when Henry was running it, was to lose your job if you shraby Nov 2013 #10
He wanted a stable and experienced labor force hack89 Nov 2013 #31
To keep his labour force, turnover was too high arthritisR_US Nov 2013 #4
+1 The myth of happy consumers is just myth leftstreet Nov 2013 #23
Ya, that was my understanding. I don't think he had an arthritisR_US Nov 2013 #29
Union organizers were creeping around the corner. demosincebirth Nov 2013 #5
Not really. former9thward Nov 2013 #19
I was not referring to the UAW demosincebirth Nov 2013 #25
Its telling that you don't say who you were referring to... former9thward Nov 2013 #28
I believe this is the right answer Major Nikon Nov 2013 #27
Too much money!! RobertEarl Nov 2013 #6
Yeah but after he gave them a raise he had to lay them off. Kingofalldems Nov 2013 #7
So his workers could afford to buy the cars they were making (his cars). Greybnk48 Nov 2013 #8
Me too BuelahWitch Nov 2013 #12
Same here 1000words Nov 2013 #15
Higher min wage would lead to more job openings due to people being able to JaneyVee Nov 2013 #9
Ford paid high wages to make a market for his products. Walmart does the same. patricia92243 Nov 2013 #11
Because he was a socialist? libdem4life Nov 2013 #14
So that he could rule over his employees with an iron fist. JVS Nov 2013 #16
THIS dairydog91 Nov 2013 #18
Exactly. If your idea of how to spend your money was buying a Ford and driving out to the country.. JVS Nov 2013 #21
I don't know about the salt thing, but he had a problem if you drank or if your wife had a job Incitatus Nov 2013 #24
He wanted them to be able to afford his cars. snagglepuss Nov 2013 #17
Ford raised wages because he had to. He also didn't have to answer to shareholders hughee99 Nov 2013 #20
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