Well Directed Innovation

All submissions have been posted in the official language in which they were provided. All identifying information has been removed except the user name under which the documents were submitted.

Submitted by ck872 2010–06–07 13:39:21 EDT

Theme: Innovation Using Digital Technologies
Idea Status: –4 | Total Votes: 10 | Comments: 0

Canada should "focus on providing the foundation for innovation" towards rapid replacement of a dangerous group of wireless technologies, now well–known to the clear–eyed to be closely implicated in all manner of modern "innovative" disease proliferation, from ALS to autism to EHS to fibromyalgia to sterility. If a tag is needed, try "post–wireless" Canada. Or perhaps, say, light–based communicative transmission will be found to be non–deleterious to biological health. Leadership is needed to honestly face the problems and provide a framework for safe development of alternatives, wired or no.

Unfortunately, minus an overview such as might be afforded by an Environment Ministry with clout, fragmented governance of "digital strategy" such as prevails now, presents many "barriers to implementation" of required safe alternatives. Obsolete safety guidelines can seize one government Department, while another presses ahead oblivious to damage wrought.

The most important "emerging issues" are already clear, and are urgently addressed in 18 recommendations at the link provided. Canada's "regulatory and policy regime" regarding better use of the term, "favourable environment", are addressed there as well.

It should matter not whether "made–in–Canada" when it comes to safeguarding life in the face of electromagnetic onslaught and insult. But as maybe the richest per capita country in the world in available resources, it is truly sad if Canada does not lead with a "made–in–Canada" "post–wireless" approach.

There is one "timeline" for revision of attitude and waking up to dangers — urgently now!

See also Infrastructure Dangers

The public consultation period ended on July 13 2010, at which time this website was closed to additional comments and submissions. News and updates on progress towards Canada’s first digital economy strategy will be posted in our Newsroom, and in other prominent locations on the site, as they become available.

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