Some students (we're all students of life, I'd hope) are tougher cases than others. It's been more than two years since my last post and David Muir and team at ABC News continue bravely reporting on the prosperity created by shrinking the size of our economic world (and
helping get this message to those least equipped to question it). They even had the breathtaking vapidity to travel to Mexico and promote "Made in America"--no mention of why Mexicans should root for "Made in America" rather than, I don't know, "Made in Mexico." In tonight's edition, one can even hear a faint paean to inefficiency when Mr. Muir concludes his piece (about Winnebagos made in Iowa) with:
"...And a number we love: for every one of those Winnebagos, it takes on average 165 of those dedicated workers to get it on the road..."
My question about this is: what is it about that number that David Muir and his colleagues so adore? Presumably, it's not that it's small. Would it be a bad thing, then, if through innovation that number were trimmed to 150? 125? 100? What if the very same Winnebago could be made in the same amount of time, at no greater (and probably lower) cost, by just 50 dedicated Hawkeye State workers--perhaps 50
Jack Rebneys? Would that be a net positive for the company? Iowa? The country? Humanity? Would Diane chime in about what "great news" such ingenuity is?
Forgive me if I find an appreciation of the benefits of doing more with less to be inconsistent with the tenor of the reporting coming out of ABC
America World News. Would that it were "great news" issuing from the dedicated workers at "Made in America." I hope it doesn't take 165 of them to stitch that segment together.
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