(IJCH) Information vs. Fluff - Thinking About Henry Ford

in #blog6 years ago (edited)

(IJCH) Information vs. Fluff - Thinking About Henry Ford

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IJCH - Inside JaiChai's Head (Meaning: My Warped, Personal Opinions and Musings)

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From the Author:

Salutations.

I am JaiChai.

And if I haven't had the pleasure of meeting you before, I'm delighted to make your acquaintance now.

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I invite you to interact with everyone, learn, and have as much fun as possible!

Fluff vs. Information - Thinking About Henry Ford

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There's definitely a big difference from what I call "Fluff" (plain vanilla, uninterpreted clumps of simple data) vs. Information (facts wih a purpose, infused with expert analysis).

So, since the old tongue loves to wag, please indulge me for a little while, ok?

As soon as I read your post, the story of Henry Ford vs. "The Newspaper" bubbled up from that blackhole called my longterm memory.

Please note:

Since I am recalling this incident from my imperfect memory, I am no doubt submitting my personal version of the story only. And I will surely be paraphrasing the actual statements. Nevertheless, you will get the gist of the story and the lesson/wisdom I am wishing to convey.

Newspaper Bashes Henry Ford

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One time, a well-circulated newspaper was embarked on a Henry Ford bashing campaign.

They became the public platform and brash voice for a large group of people who were self-proclaimed, fervent "Henry Ford Haters".

Granted, Henry Ford was not the easiest man to work for - much less get along with.

But the Anti-Ford propaganda machine eventually became both ludicrous and unduly vicious. They accused him of embodying everything that was evil; blaming him for all the common people's personal, financial and political ills.

In short, they portrayed him as the closest thing to the "Anti-Christ on Earth" of the current times.

Ford Strikes Back

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So, Henry Ford being, well...Henry Ford!, decided not to tolerate the nonsense any further and took the newspaper to court for slander, defamation of character, etc. - in a dramatic, controversial and very publicized trial.

When Henry Ford was on the stand, the newspaper's team of lawyers doggedly grilled him with a myriad of questions aimed to illustrate the subpar level of Henry Ford's general knowledge; and by proxy, his below average IQ.

They peppered him with questions about everything under the sun. They asked questions that ranged from general knowledge to the minutiae of optimum engine design.

The questions were neither relevant to the case, nor remotely understandable to some of the most innovative, genius inventors of the time - basically resembling total trivia.

Why did they do this?

Simple. The newspaper wanted to prove that Henry Ford was really not the genius that many were led to believe

This strategy was - in the newspaper's opinion - the perfect way to fuel the Anti-Ford movement; validating the conspiracy theorists' beliefs that Ford's wealth must have been the result of illegal, despotic business shenanigans - NOT from any superior business skills or marketing acumen.

No Ruffled Feathers

For days, Henry Ford remained unperturbed; seemingly oblivious that he may well be appearing like an arrogant, ignorant imbecile (which was exactly what the newspaper's lawyers wanted to paint him as).

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Stoically, Henry Ford endured the circus show - repeatedly stating that he didn't know the answer for each puzzling question after the other.

Once the "Spanish Inquisition" was done, the newspaper's attorneys were so pleased with the "obvious" success of their brilliant strategy that they all looked like a group of Cheshire Cats after a big meal - "fat, dumb and happy".

But then Henry Ford was allowed to have his say...

Ford Logic

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Addressing the judge, the lawyers from both sides of the litigation, and everyone within earshot of his voice, he said this:

"Sir, on the desk in my office is a rectangular box with a row of buttons on top. Each button activates a different signal when pressed.

Anytime I don't know something I need to know at the time to help me solve a particular problem, I press one of those buttons.

An electrical signal is sent to a receiver at the end of the circuit.

And at the other end of each circuit is stationed a different subject-matter-expert from every specialty in business.

The panel consists of globally recognized leaders from the academic, scientific, engineering, design and prototyping, personnel management, manufacturing, and marketing sectors.

Their sole purpose is to provide me with whatever information I need, whenever I need it. And they will most definitely deliver that information to me immediately or risk losing their well-paying jobs.

THE Question

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So, now I will ask you a question, just one simple question:

Why should I clutter my mind with useless information that I can quickly and easily obtain, when I can use my mind, energy and time more efficiently solving real world, important problems?"

After Henry Ford asked his question, the courtroom went deafly silent - so quiet that you could literally hear a pin drop.

Since the newspaper's strategy hinged upon proving Henry Ford's ignorance, the judge quickly ruled in Henry Ford's favor.

Any appeal submitted by the newspaper became moot.

Imagine that?

We now have a lightning fast version of that box with the buttons on top and its circuits.

It's called Google and the internet.

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"Google is like our version of the Oracle from Greek mythology. Never before have we had instantaneous access to virtually all of humanity's collective written knowledge - complete with HD audio and visual effects too!" - Elon Musk

Parting Shot

Stubborn ole' Ford. He nagged his engineers into making what they thought was impossible - A single-Block Engine.

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(This is an updated version of https://steemit.com/life/@jaichai/ijch-responding-to-futureentech-fluff-vs-information)

By JaiChai

Mighty Kind of You for stopping by.

Truly hope to see you again!

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About the Author

Believing that school was too boring, he dropped out of High School early; only to earn an AA, BS and MBA in less than 4 years much later in life – while working full-time as a Navy/Marine Corps Medic.

In spite of a fear of heights and deep water, he performed high altitude, free-fall parachute jumps and hazardous diving ops in deep, open ocean water.

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After 24 years of active duty, he retired in Asia.

Since then, he's been a full-time, single papa and actively pursuing his varied passions (Writing, Disruptive Technology, Computer Science and Cryptocurrency - plus more hobbies too boring or bizarre for most folk).

He lives on an island paradise with his teenage daughter, longtime girlfriend and three dogs.

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(More articles by JaiChai can be found on the Busy.org website. Use this link to visit Busy.org. Better yet, come join the Busy.org community!)


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"My mind was a terrible thing to waste..." - JaiChai

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This post was resteemed by @steemvote and received a 99.59% Upvote. Send 0.5 SBD or STEEM to @steemvote

google use to be like that but there are so much fake info and ads now not sure it is that to us anymore. But the Internet is you just have to know where to look

You're correct. I forgot to add what I use - Presearch.

Namaste, Jaichai

People misunderstand intelligence. It's not the same as knowledge. Henry Ford was brilliant at one thing, and that's really all he needed to brilliant at. Everything else was someone else's domain.

Whilst I agree with the principle, I think you are assuming that the seeker of information has an adequate amount of critical and analytical ability to sort and decipher the information that comes out of the machine. Or the patience and the willpower to sort and analyse it...

Very true.

Like the guy who reads a word that he doesn't know, ignores it - thinking it is inconsequential, then continues on with a false premise to the wrong
final conclusion.

And all of this simply because of sheer laziness!

Thanks for your comments.

Namaste, JaiChai

P.S.

I haven't read the term "whilst" in ages! LOL!

Ha ha, I'm old fashioned!

Great thought-provoking post. I don't like Google either, but I take your point – we have experts literally at our fingertips these days.
Though whether it frees our mind so we can focus on other things or just presents a distraction is another question!

Thanks for visiting and commenting.

Namaste, JaiChai

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