📘 Enough Is Enough: Complete Series I Overview
A 5-part series examining how corporate power shapes Canada's economy and politics — and what democratic alternatives might look like.
Summaries, images, and the full series argument in one place.
Individual Posts:
-
Part 1: Welcome to mycdnprince — Enough Is Enough
→ Introduction: why this blog exists -
Part 2: Who Owns Canada? Corporate Power and the Illusion of Democracy
→ Banking, telecom, energy — who really controls Canada's economy? -
Part 3: The Housing Crisis in Canada Is Not an Accident
→ How policy choices turned shelter into speculation -
Part 4: What Public Ownership Would Actually Look Like in Canada
→ Democratic models for energy, housing, and infrastructure -
Part 5: How to Build a Democratic Mass Movement in Canada
→ From frustration to collective power
New to the series? Start with the pillar page above. Already reading? Jump to any part.
📙 Series II: The Power to Change It — From Frustration to Collective Power
A 5-part series exploring why working people feel the system is rigged, how that perception is rooted in real economic structures, and why collective power is historically how change happens.
Why change is possible—and why it feels blocked.
Individual Posts:
-
Part 6: The Broken Ladder: Why Working People in Canada Feel the System Is Rigged
→ Wages stagnate, costs soar, and ownership beats labour—why the “work hard” promise collapsed for working Canadians. -
Part 7: The Myth That Ordinary People Have No Power
→ Power isn’t gone—it’s been organized upward; this shows where collective leverage still exists (and how to see it). -
Part 8: The Story You’ll Never See on the Front Page: Why Corporate Media Won’t Tell This Story
→ When information is owned, narratives follow—how media incentives filter what you’re allowed to notice, name, and demand. -
Part 9: The First Step Toward Real Change: Getting Organized
→ Outrage doesn’t scale—organization does; a practical bridge from isolated frustration to coordinated action. -
Part 10: If Change Is Coming, Let’s Lead It: Building a Democratic Mass Movement
→ If change is coming, the question is who leads it—what it takes to build a movement with real staying power.
New to the series? Start with the pillar page above. Already reading? Jump to any part.