Good to have KP wade into these discussion.
Further to what KP says and why many of us are so suspicious on a number of environmental issues including fish farms of course.
Muzzling scientists fetters innovation
By Stephen Hume, Vancouver Sun April 30, 2012 Many years ago, I attended a gathering of top media executives at the American Press Institute.
We senior management suits had been dispatched to glean wisdom from various gurus about the future of newspapers.
The speaker's name is lost to me in the mossy recesses of time, but the gist of what he said returned to mind the other day after reading two stories.
The first was an op-ed piece by Anne Golden, CEO of the Conference Board of Canada.
It was headlined "We need to unleash our entrepreneurial genes" and observed that although the federal government's last bud-get highlighted innovation as a driver of economic growth and Canada has an excellent public policy framework for encouraging innovation, performance is consistently poor.
Both the entrepreneurial gene and the genetic code for competitive leadership seems suppressed, Golden argued.
The second was a story by Post-media colleague Margaret Munro.
Her story was about how the federal government had dispatched media minders to an international polar conference in Montreal to monitor, to record and presumably to report what Environment Canada scientists said to reporters.
When did Montreal morph into Cold War Moscow? Government minders for scientists certainly seem more in keeping with Soviet Union-style surveillance than a democracy which cites freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression as a fundamental constitutional right.
This troubling trend has been underway for some time. The government calls it "established practice." However, our federal Politburo's "minding" of scientific discourse has now drawn concerned attention from the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Canadian science writers' associations in both English and French, and the Writer's Union of Canada.
Nature, one of the world's leading scientific journals, has called upon Canada to "set its scientists free."
Perhaps more troubling, the Canadian arm of PEN International, the global organization of writers dedicated to defending freedom of expression in repressive places like China, Uzbekistan and Iran, has now voiced concerns that "the federal government's restrictions on media access to publicly funded scientists have become a serious infringement on the right to freedom of expression."
All this brings me back to the address at that long ago API session.
The speaker said that he'd just arrived on a plane carrying blue-jeaned staff from a major Silicon Valley company to a computer industry conference.
He couldn't hear himself think for the passionate arguments, enthusiastic exchanges of information, loud disagreements and agreements and eureka moments all emerging from the roar of conversation, he told us. Then he'd arrived at our API conference reception and felt like he'd come to a funeral, all polite murmurs and careful conversational platitudes from intensely controlled people sipping soda water dressed up with a slice of lemon to look like a gin and tonic.
"That's your problem as an industry," he began.
I took that insight away and mulled it over. He was right. The best newsrooms in which I've worked have always been like that flight he described. The best bosses have been those who never hesitated to hire square pegs or to tolerate eccentrics and who encouraged the friction of off-the-wall ideas and the ferment of disagreement they generate.
They didn't want obsequious minions around them; they wanted people speaking their minds even when what they said was disagreeable.
So when the Conference Board's CEO tells us we need to liberate our innovation genes, I can suggest one way to guarantee that goal won't be achieved.
Create an Orwellian culture in which senior scientists can't be trusted to discuss what they've discovered without some political commissar making sure that they are uttering only the "approved" version.
"We cannot expect Canadian scientists to work productively for the greater good at home, or exert Canadian influence abroad, if their work is routinely subordinated to the demands of political messaging," warns PEN Canada's Philip Slayton.
Indeed. Stifle disagreement, sup-press dissent, insist on a political culture of subservient 'yes' men and women in which every comment must first be run through the Politburo's massage parlour and the first victim will be the culture of innovation.
Innovation requires letting ideas out of the corral. Fetter expression and you chain ideas. This means your entrepreneurial genes can't be unleashed.
Read more:
http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Muzzling+scientists+fetters+innovation/6542139/story.html#ixzz1tcy17E2z