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Justin Trudeau Touts Technological Innovation During MIT Campus Visit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 May, 2018 04:05 PM
    CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau remembers asking why the stereo and other gadgets he had as a boy were made in Japan — not in Canada.
     
     
    Trudeau's father, prime minister at the time, told him that Japan, a country with few natural resources — unlike Canada — had to invest in its people and technological innovation.
     
     
    Trudeau tells a gathering of U.S. tech entrepreneurs today the answer made him angry — why couldn't Canada do the same?
     
     
    The prime minister is visiting the Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus to headline the annual meeting of the school's Solve initiative.
     
     
    The project links technology entrepreneurs with leaders in government, business and the academic world to address global problems.
     
     
    Trudeau's three-day trip to the United States comes at a tense stage of talks between Canada, the U.S. and Mexico over whether to renew the North American Free Trade Agreement.

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    In Canada, Ontario Gurdwaras Bar Indian Officials From Entering Premises

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    2017 Home Sales In Vancouver More Normal But Prices Up Says Real Estate Board

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    Prominent Canadian Theatre Figure Albert Schultz Faces Sex, Harassment Claims

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    Southern Vancouver Island's First Baby Of 2018 Born On Laundry Room Floor

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    Young Political Staffers Most Vulnerable To Sex Harassment On The Hill, Says Elizabeth May

    May is making the observation following a new Canadian Press survey of female MPs that suggests the problem is as prevalent in the corridors of power in Ottawa as it is everywhere else.

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