Correction for Disabilities

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 14:07:43 EDT

Theme: Canada's Digital Content
Idea Status: +5 | Total Votes: 11 | Comments: 0

"6 — How can we ensure that all Canadians, including those with disabilities (learning, visual, auditory), will benefit from and participate in the Canadian digital economy?"

"learning" — autism is closely associated with in utero inappropriate electromagnetic exposures

"visual" — eye damage was among the earliest well–established effects of inappropriate electromagnetic exposures

"auditory" — radiofrequency hearing or auditory effect, a type of tinnitus, of still uncertain mechanism, has become rampant these past few years of mass proliferation of wireless usage

Put all three together and one gets a sense of the absurdity of official ignoring of scholarly and anecdotal accounts of the grave dangers under the current HC–IC regime re all manner of electromagnetic usage.

Disabilities are growing as cries of danger continue to be ignored.
What sense addressing access for disabled people minus addressing the very generation of such disabilities, all around the very same topic?!

See also Infrastructure dangers and Well Directed Innovation.

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.

Between May 10 and July 13, more than 2010 Canadian individuals and organizations registered to share their ideas and submissions. You can read their contributions — and the comments from other users — in the Submissions Area and the Idea Forum.

Share this page

To share this page, just select the social network of your choice:

No endorsement of any products or services is expressed or implied.