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 .1xx [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Riesman | David Reisman]]'s [[ https://archive.org/details/lonelycrowdstudy00ries | The Lonely Crowd ]] 1950  .153 [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Riesman | David Reisman]]'s [[ https://archive.org/details/lonelycrowdstudy00ries | The Lonely Crowd ]] 1950
 .157-158 [[ https://archive.org/details/Galaxy_Science_Fiction_Novel_21_Jack_Williamson_The_Humanoids_1950 | Jack Williamson ]] ''The Humanoids'' [[ https://archive.org/details/slaughterhousefi0000vonn_n3j1 | Kurt Vonnegut ]] ''Player Piano'' [[ https://archive.org/details/ruinsofearthanth0000unse | Phillip K. Dick ]] ''Autofac''
 .158 [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elektro | Elektro ]]
 .159 [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Human_Use_of_Human_Beings | The Human Use of Human Beings ]] [[ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norbert_Wiener | Norbert Wiener ]] 1950 ''in KHL library''
 .162 1932 Can seal tester photo, 300/minute
 .164 during 1950s, industrial production rose 43%, coal up 96%, blue collar employment dropped 10%
 .164 United Auto Workers 1953 "... obsolete as producers because the mechanicak monsters around them cannot replace them as consumers."
 .166 JFK: "...find 25,000 new jobs every week to take care of those displaced by machines."
 .168 Ernest van den Haag 1957 "production of standardized things ... demands ... standardized persons"
 .169 1956 "Invasion of the body snatchers" film
 .172 [[ https://search.library.pdx.edu/permalink/01ALLIANCE_PSU/1sk2t0o/alma99119678550001451 | The technological society, Ellul, 1957 trans 1964 ]]
 .178 Lordstown 1971 GM Vega, no line job takes more than half an hour to learn, ... keep up with the line in half a shift
 .182 [[ https://cdni.rbth.com/rbthmedia/images/all/2017/08/24/Fitness/01_rian_712391hr_b.jpg | soviet line workers exercising, 1972 ]]
 .182[[ https://search.library.pdx.edu/permalink/01ALLIANCE_PSU/1sk2t0o/alma99112842001853 | The man on the assembly line, Walker, 1953 ]]
 .185 1990 MIT researchers "lean production"
 .187 1950 US workers 5 times more productive, 1990 Europe and Japan closed gap, Belgium Norway Netherlands exceeded
 .188 even though US productivity rose 250%, blue collars from 1/4 to 1/6 of all US employees
 .188 US sales peaked at 9.7M in 1973, then oil embargo
 .189 US hobbled by incremental change and path dependence
 .191 The chrysanthemum and the sword : patterns of Japanese culture, Ruth Benedict 1946 [[ https://search.library.pdx.edu/permalink/01ALLIANCE_PSU/1sk2t0o/alma9959134101853 | PSU ]] [[ https://archive.org/details/chrysanthemumswo00bene_0 | Internet Archive ]]

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America's Assembly Line

David E. Nye, 2023 / 670.43 NYE Tigard Library

Henry Ford sponsored the modern electrically-powered conveyor assembly line with specialized single-function workstations, and the five day work week. Ford also appreciated and hired and groomed expertise, both in his engineers and his line workers.

Ford also paid high wages, providing workers with the means to purchase automobiles and other mass-produced products. Competitors adopted the same procedures to compete for workers and for product sales.

AssemblyLine (last edited 2024-05-25 02:56:35 by KeithLofstrom)