Rather than being happy they are working to ship a quality product, you are disgusted that they are taking the time to fix it rather than slapping it out to get it to you quickly?
I'd be commending them for being cautious, especially this early in the production of a new model.
Well, if I was in that position, I would want what I ordered, when it was promised, AND done right before I got it. You are approaching it as though people shouldn't be able to expect all three. With as many problems as are popping up, clearly Ford did NOT finish all the testing and development that they should have done BEFORE accepting orders and promising delivery dates.
If it were me, I would call Ford's customer service dept., and send a letter to the CEO, informing that I'm going to the dealer to cancel my order, since they have materially breached the contract. I would expect a full refund of any/all deposits, immediately. Maybe, after the guinea pigs who still waited for their's started reporting that Ford finally got it right, then maybe a would consider placing a new order.
If, on the other hand, I was someone who already took delivery, and started having as many problems as has been reported, well..... After the third one, I would be invoking the Lemon Law, and telling Ford to buy it back, and maybe call me when they can get them out of the factory right the first time.
All part of the reason why I doubt I would EVER buy a new car, even if I could afford it. $15-$20k spent on restoring/modifying an older vehicle (car/truck/whatever you want) would give something better and more reliable then anything you can buy off the showroom; as well as being custom tailored to what you want/need. Not to mention, if you build it yourself, you'll know every inch of it.
On the other hand $1500-$3000 for a good used vehicle gives much of the value/utility of a new car, without the payments, increased insurance, or depreciation.