Skip to main content
 logo

You are here

Home

media

Mistakes and Consequences

Mistakes

Consequences

Placing the Presumption on the Wrong Side

The most common mistake people make is to subject persons with sensitivities to a reverse onus when they report their experience of repeatable, controllable circumstances, contrary to ethics, social convention and laws since the Magna Carta. This practice is unethical in any context, but becomes especially damaging in clinical medicine.

  • business
  • consumer
  • education
  • government
  • health care
  • Labour
  • media
  • medicine
  • NGO
  • science
  • attitudes
  • governance
  • history
  • Read more about Mistakes and Consequences
  • Add new comment

Mary Agnes Welch

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

  • Canadian
  • hate literature
  • media
  • Read more about Mary Agnes Welch
  • Add new comment

CBC Logo

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

  • Canadian
  • hate literature
  • media
  • Read more about CBC Logo
  • Add new comment

Canadian Association of Journalists

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

  • Canadian
  • hate literature
  • media
  • Read more about Canadian Association of Journalists
  • Add new comment

Medical Inquiries Title Page

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

  • medicine
  • health care
  • media
  • international
  • Read more about Medical Inquiries Title Page
  • Add new comment

Max Keeping and Carol Anne Meehan

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

  • Canadian
  • hate literature
  • media
  • municipal
  • Read more about Max Keeping and Carol Anne Meehan
  • Add new comment

Peter Ackroyd

Taxonomy upgrade extras: 

  • history
  • book
  • media
  • international
  • Read more about Peter Ackroyd
  • Add new comment

Welcome to a new web site!!!

But it's not open yet. To visit the old AGES site, browse to liquidvisual.ca/public

AGES is being revamped to include several hundred documents relating to the exclusion, injury and killing of Canadians with environmental sensitivities. Since 1993, more than 100,000 Canadians with drug sensitivities have been killed in health care settings, while federal officials have lied about harm reduction efforts made before that date by various departments.

Based on projections from 1998, more than a dozen Canadians with sensitivities are unnecessarily killed every day.

One of Canada's top five human rights abuses continues because it is invisibilized. A story of courage in the face of mistakes and deceits--not to mention who lied, who turned their backs, who contributes to these deaths--will be uploaded over the next several months.

Meanwhile, to contact AGES, email cbrown@ages.ca

  • Canadian
  • consumer
  • media
  • website
  • Read more about Welcome to a new web site!!!
  • Add new comment
  • Home
  • Bibliography/Documents
  • Mistakes and Consequences
  • Unnecessary Deaths
  • Canadian Parliament
  • Provincial Issues
  • Cities and Sensitivities
  • Incoming News
  • Contact Us
Subscribe to RSS - media