What I'm About
Blurred Promise, Sharp Reality
Democratic ideals blurred, economic reality in sharp focus.
|
What Lies Beneath
The economic reality beneath democratic ideals.
|
Visible, But Distant
Democratic ideals, visible but increasingly inaccessible.
|
| Three views of the same divide: democratic institutions, corporate power, and the economic reality in between. | ||
About mycdnprince
About mycdnprince | Wealth & Power in Canada
mycdnprince is an independent Canadian political blog examining wealth inequality, corporate power, and the widening gap between democratic ideals and economic reality.
This site exists because the system many Canadians were promised no longer works as advertised. Wages lag behind rising costs, housing has been turned into a speculative asset, and key sectors of the economy are controlled by a small number of powerful corporations.
These outcomes are political choices, not inevitabilities.
What This Site Does
mycdnprince focuses on structural analysis, not partisan spin.
It explores how policy, money, and power shape everyday life in Canada — and how those forces affect democracy itself. Topics include inequality, housing, corporate concentration, lobbying, and political accountability.
The aim is clarity over outrage, and understanding over comfort.
Independence Matters
This site is not affiliated with any political party, corporation, or institution. It is reader‑supported to remain independent and free to question power wherever it concentrates.
Analysis loses its value when it has to serve the status quo.
Why It Matters
Democracy depends on legitimacy. Legitimacy depends on fairness.
When economic security becomes unattainable for large numbers of people, trust erodes and participation declines. That isn’t apathy — it’s a rational response to exclusion.
mycdnprince exists to examine that reality honestly.
About the Author
mycdnprince is written by John Prince, a proud Canadian citizen concerned with growing inequality, declining accountability, and the distance between political power and the people it is meant to serve.
Stay Connected
If these issues matter to you, consider subscribing and supporting independent political analysis. New articles are published regularly exploring wealth, power, and democratic reform in Canada. Follow along as the conversation grows.
The blog begins with the introductory article “Enough Is Enough: Wealth Inequality, Corporate Power, and the Future of Canada.”
_______________
❖