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"Henry Ford and the Jews: The Mass Production of Hate by Baldwin

Henry Ford and the Jews: The Mass Production of Hate is by Neil Baldwin (published in 2002).

Baldwin reported that car manufacturer Henry Ford (1863-1947), inventor Thomas Edison and tyre magnet Harvey Fires­t­one used to go on motor-car expeditions to the Appalachian and New Eng­land hills. Normally, when the great business tycoons of the early C20th met, most of them generally kept their views hidden be­hind the fences of their very private country clubs. Ford, on the other hand, advert­ised his anti-Semitism almost as widely and loud­ly as he promoted his Model T. As did aviator Charles Lindbergh.

In 1919, Ford purchased The Dearborn Independent,  then a small newspaper published in the Michigan city where his factory was. For the next eight years, the weekly publication became a veh­ic­le for his bigoted political views. One of the paper’s chief targets was the “International Jew”, a sinister figure cited as the root cause of WWI. For 91 newspaper editions, the weekly paper announced a variety of Jewish-evil-influenced major stories in its headlines.

Henry Ford, The International Jew,  Nov 1920
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The most popular and aggressive stories about the Jewish menace were then selected and reprinted in four volumes in 1920 called The Inter­national Jew: The World's Problem. To increase sales, Ford sent a memo to his car dealers saying that ev­eryone who bought a Model T would have to buy a sub­scription to his newspaper as well. A series of articles detailed Ford's belief that a cabal of Jews, a few super-men of the despised race, was plotting to subordinate the proud Gentile race. It was tran­slated into Ger­man, in 1922, and published in Germ­any where the book was a bestseller.

Note that Ford was the only American honoured enough to be mentioned by name in Hitler's Mein Kampf, published in 1925!

In 1927, a Jewish lawyer Aaron Sapiro sued Ford for defamation. In court, Ford refused to take responsibility for the articles that appeared in his newspaper. During the trial, the editor William Cameron testified that Ford had nothing to do with the editorials even though they were under his byline. The suit ended in a mistrial, but amongst all that bad publicity, Ford agreed to a private settlement with Sapiro. Ford issued a pissy public apology for his newspaper’s years of defamatory content and quickly sold the Independent.

We might understand how deeply embedded anti-Semitism was in the culture of Ford's youth. But why did Ford go on his anti-Jewish crusade so publicly - with prejudices that wiser businessmen kept to them­sel­ves? Because Jews didn't accept Jes­us as the Messiah?

Note that Ford Motor Co. has long been under fire because its German subsidiary used slave laborers during WW2 while building military vehicles for the Nazis. Eventually the company issued a lengthy report in 2001, finding itself innocent. Yet Ford had eagerly collaborated with the Nazis, helping Hitler prepare for war and, after the 1939 invasion of Poland, conduct the war. Ford’s behaviour in France following the German occupation of June 1940 showed its collaborationist posture even more disturbingly.

In late 1941, Ford Werke's board worried that the USA would enter the war in support of Britain and the government would conf­iscate the Cologne plant. To prevent such an outcome, the Cologne management wrote to the Reich Commission that year to say that it questioned whether Ford must be treated as enemy property, even in the event of a USA declaration of war on Germany. Ford became a purely German company and took over all obligations so succ­ess­fully that the American majority shareholder actually contributed to the develop­ment of German industry.

So Hitler's respect for Henry Ford was clearly based on his apprec­iation of Ford's production techniques, not on their shared anti-Semitism. “We look to Heinrich Ford as the leader of the growing Fas­cist movement in America; I regard him as my inspirat­ion”, Hitler said in an inter­view.

Ford's publishing arm also distributed The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, a book that was to become the bible of modern anti-Semitism. A supposed master plan for Jewish world dominance, the book was actually a crude forgery, as Ford himself knew.

In 1933 Ford came under intense pressure and was sued for libel by a businessman named by Ford as a key member of the Jewish conspiracy. Ford settled out of court. “I am not a Jew hater, and I have never met Hitler”, he wrote in a statement to a Jewish publication that was widely reprinted by the Hearst news­paper chain. Yet 5 years lat­­­er Ford received the Grand Service Cross of the Supreme Or­der of the German Eagle, a Nazi medal presented on his 75th birthday.

Ford receiving the Grand Service Cross of the Supreme Or­der of the German Eagle, 
presented in Michigan in July 1938 
by the two German consuls Kapp and Heller.

Look at the date. Hitler was becoming militaristic in Europe, and Americans were beginning to fear another World War. Americans had little time for the paranoid fantasies of the car king, and the Ford Motor Company was distancing itself from the views of its own founder.

Henry Ford was not the only head of industry who opposed America's entry into WW2. But he may have been one of the few who declared WW2 as the product of greedy financiers who sought profit in human destruction. Furthermore he announced that the torpedoing of American merchant ships by German submarines was the result of conspiratorial activities undertaken by Jewish financiers and war-makers.
Into his final decade of life, after several strokes and mental crises, Ford's anti-Semitism became even more paranoid than earlier on. Ford’s private notebooks show that he continued to view Jews as part of an "anti-Ford Motor Co conspiracy", involving financiers, the New Deal, labour unions and his major auto competitors. He died in 1947.















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