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Do We Have A Tommorrow?, by smemud(m): 7:12am On Apr 18, 2017 |
For how long will our future be dependent on the giant strides of individuals and governments in other parts of the world? To eradicate polio, we were totally reliant on not just foreign funding but also external execution and evaluation, just as we are totally reliant on foreign bodies for vaccines to subdue the presently raging meningitis in large parts of Nigeria. At a recent technology and innovation expo in Abuja, the minister of science and technology, Dr. Ogbonnaya Onu, staged a grand entrance in a wooden car named Amara, coupled together by a certain Ahmed Aliyu. Amara, the wooden car, was the show stopper; it got all the media attention, all the accolades and even made its inventor, Ahmed Aliyu quite popular. It gave Dr. Onu some bragging rights, after all the maxim that Nigerians are gifted had suddenly been seconded by such an innovation. Perhaps a brief lesson in history will help us realise that the euphoria about a wooden car invention is certainly more than a century late. In 1908, the Ford Plant in Michigan, Detroit, rolled out hundreds of units of the Model T Ford (colloquially called the Tin Lizzie), while Henry Ford, its inventor, looked on. This invention became the darling of the middle class owing to its efficient fabrication, which made it inexpensive and hence Henry Ford’s dream of democratising transportation was born. The Model T ford sold 16.5 million units. Now that is what you call an innovation. Interestingly, Dr. Onu, the visionary minister of science and technology whose dream for the country is to see Nigeria manufacture pencils by 2018 was also named the most performing minister of the year by an Abuja based magazine, Verbatim. The event, which garnered global coverage, saw Dr. Onu awarded for his “exemplary performance and outstanding leadership”, was simply to me a demonstration of mutually assured mediocrity, apologies to Tony Elumelu. Rather than rolling out the vuvuzela in celebration of a feat attained by others over a century ago, we must articulate a bold and compelling vision for our country, determine the resources and capabilities required and strategically invest in the people, process and technology that will deliver the future. For how long will our future be dependent on the giant strides of individuals and governments in other parts of the world? To eradicate polio, we were totally reliant on not just foreign funding but also external execution and evaluation, just as we are totally reliant on foreign bodies for vaccines to subdue the presently raging meningitis in large parts of Nigeria. I make bold to say that it is either we wake up or face extinction because a people totally dependent can hardly perpetuate themselves positively. We presently have another opportunity to create a future for ourselves and our children – one we all would be proud of, but we must find the courage to look 30 years ahead to determine where we want to be and begin to build towards this today. Currently, Microsoft is working on developing a machine called Hanover. It aims to memorise all information necessary to cancer and help predict which combination of drugs will be most effective for each patient. It is leading the fight on myeloid leukaemia, a fatal cancer in which treatment has not improved in decades. The Jaguar Land Rover began testing self-driving technology on public roads last year. The trials heled to develop innovative self-driving technology, including safe pull away features aimed at preventing low speed accidents at junctions, roundabouts and in slow moving traffic. Elon Musk is trying to redefine transportation on earth and in space. He has injected fully electric cars in to the market and is currently lunching satellites that will help send human beings to other planets. A factory in Dongguan, China replaced 90 percent of its human workers with robots and saw production rise by 250 percent while defects dropped by 80 percent. I could write a book on how individuals, companies and governments around the world are breaking barriers, extending frontiers and creating the future, while we look on, waiting for the eighth day of the week to take action. We are where we are today largely because 30 years ago, not one leader had the courage or the vision to see today and invest in the critical areas that would have yielded much dividend. Remember that China was able to lift over 600 million people out of poverty in 30 years because they had a vision, laid out a plan and got to work at it. We presently have another opportunity to create a future for ourselves and our children – one we all would be proud of, but we must find the courage to look 30 years ahead to determine where we want to be and begin to build towards this today. Ayodele Adio is co-host of a Lagos radio programme. http://opinion.premiumtimesng.com/2017/04/17/do-we-have-a-tommorrow-by-ayodele-adio/ |
Re: Do We Have A Tommorrow?, by mickeyenglish(m): 7:28am On Apr 18, 2017 |
Post No Bill |
Re: Do We Have A Tommorrow?, by three: 7:39am On Apr 18, 2017 |
Thanks Op! (please put gaps in between your paragraphs to aid readability) |
Re: Do We Have A Tommorrow?, by Alisegun(m): 7:59am On Apr 18, 2017 |
? |
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