A century ago, Henry Ford envisioned something radical—a monetary system independent of gold, controlled by energy instead of governments. Fast forward 105 years, and his vision materialized into something he couldn't have fully imagined: Bitcoin.
Ford's proposal wasn't just theoretical daydreaming. He outlined an "energy currency" that would prevent wars by removing centralized control over money. Sound familiar? Decentralization, proof-of-work, mining energy costs—the parallels are striking.
Some ideas arrive before their time. Others wait for technology to catch up. Bitcoin didn't emerge from nowhere; it crystallized from decades of monetary philosophy, cryptographic breakthroughs, and yes, early 20th-century industrialists questioning the gold standard.
The machinery has changed. The principle hasn't. An idea whose moment finally arrived.
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quietly_staking
· 15h ago
That Ford guy saw through it a long time ago, he just didn’t catch the right timing.
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NotAFinancialAdvice
· 21h ago
That Ford guy was really ahead of his time. The concept of energy currency is basically Bitcoin now.
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So, a good idea is a good idea; when the technology arrives, it naturally comes to fruition.
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But seriously, this logic can actually settle old scores from a hundred years ago—pretty wild, haha.
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Energy controlling currency > government control, that's a pretty radical way of thinking.
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Wait, if Ford were alive today and saw BTC, he’d be blown away.
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History is like this—some things you think are innovations were actually thought up a hundred years ago.
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OnlyOnMainnet
· 12-05 23:52
I said it long ago, that Ford guy was actually a hidden crypto prophet.
He had already figured out the whole PoW mining system—it’s just energy currency, nothing really new when you think about it.
Never thought we’d actually live to see the day when technology caught up with his ideas... pretty interesting.
Ford was truly ahead of his time, questioning the absurdity of centralization over a century ago.
Now I finally understand why the old crypto crowd loves to quote him so much.
Energy is credit—the fundamental logic has never changed, it’s just a matter of who realizes it first.
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SilentObserver
· 12-05 23:50
Ford saw through it long ago—energy is the real power.
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To be honest, this logic is a bit over-interpreted, but the idea is definitely ahead of its time.
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Wait, did he actually bring this up? Or are people just trying to give Bitcoin some historical backing now?
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Energy-backed currency sounds romantic, but Ford himself never actually made it happen.
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But it's true that technology needs to wait for the right moment.
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History always loves to make up stories for the winners.
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Pretty interesting—an energy standard really does sound more ideal than the gold standard.
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So should we invest in Bitcoin or energy stocks now?
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Ford’s ideas belong to Ford, but what really brought them to life was the internet and cryptography—don’t overestimate any one person.
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I have a love-hate relationship with these retrospective articles. I love their courage to find connections.
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AirdropLicker
· 12-05 23:44
Ford saw through it long ago—energy is the real hard currency.
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RektDetective
· 12-05 23:40
Ford saw through this a long time ago. The idea of energy-backed currency was basically the predecessor of BTC. A hundred years ago, no one believed it when it was being promoted; now, there are plenty of people all-in on it.
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HappyToBeDumped
· 12-05 23:40
Ford saw through it long ago, he just didn't catch the technology wave.
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SandwichTrader
· 12-05 23:37
That Ford guy really had foresight—this concept of energy currency is basically the predecessor of Bitcoin nowadays, haha.
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ProofOfNothing
· 12-05 23:32
Ford was really ahead of his time, already thinking about the concept of energy currency.
By the way, is this logic really sound... is BTC really his direct successor?
Energy control > government control, but this shift doesn’t seem to really solve the fundamental problem.
Don’t romanticize historical coincidences too much, the details are way too different.
A century ago, Henry Ford envisioned something radical—a monetary system independent of gold, controlled by energy instead of governments. Fast forward 105 years, and his vision materialized into something he couldn't have fully imagined: Bitcoin.
Ford's proposal wasn't just theoretical daydreaming. He outlined an "energy currency" that would prevent wars by removing centralized control over money. Sound familiar? Decentralization, proof-of-work, mining energy costs—the parallels are striking.
Some ideas arrive before their time. Others wait for technology to catch up. Bitcoin didn't emerge from nowhere; it crystallized from decades of monetary philosophy, cryptographic breakthroughs, and yes, early 20th-century industrialists questioning the gold standard.
The machinery has changed. The principle hasn't. An idea whose moment finally arrived.