In that context, you're on the breakwater. I went to law school at UVic, so I know a bit about that territory. I had the privilege and honour of being in that space.
In 20 years, an indigenous language coder and allies will go to the breakwater and talk in dialogue with orcas and salmon to inform the source water protection structure up above Victoria. For people who don't know, the source water is above the cities. There's a source water protection area. Through machine learning systems, analytics, ceremony, spirit involving the academics— Victoria is a small city, a capital city, but has a lot of academics per capita—visions, interfaces with the municipality, the province, and the federal government, insights will be offered into source water protection systems which will inform and engage the non-human on a proactive basis.
Isn't that a future that Canada should aspire to? We would inspire the world. The reason is Canada has the sophisticated infrastructure. We have the sophisticated analytical capacities that other countries do not. We have the legal capacity. We're a multi-juridical jurisdiction. We already have UN declaration legislation in B.C. at the municipal level in Victoria and at the federal level. We are optimized to do something no one has ever done.
That's my vision. I don't have the technical or coding capacity quite yet to do it, but that might be something we could aspire to.