Entrepreneurship
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Portrays entrepreneurial ambition as under attack by regulators and equates business innovation with populist resistance.
Mifsud’s quote is used selectively to support the idea that discouraging such models 'kills ambition' and harms the economy. The article frames regulatory scrutiny as hostile to innovation rather than consumer safety.
“When you kill ambition, you kill the spirit and you discourage people from spending and doing anything, which is not good for the economy.”
Entrepreneurship is framed as declining and discouraged in Canada, with negative societal consequences
[loaded_adjectives], [contextualisation]
“The precipitous decline in the number of Canadians willing to create a career of their own making, to start businesses and create employment for others, is one indicator.”
portrayed as inherently beneficial and socially enriching
The article idealizes entrepreneurship as a moral and societal force, claiming it 'lifts up society' and embodies human synergy, without acknowledging structural barriers or critiques of wealth concentration.
“The essence of entrepreneurship is the idea that you can improve your life by helping others improve their lives.”
Framed as less legitimate due to personal drama overshadowing business merit
The article ignores business context (market size, product differentiation) and instead frames Brooklyn’s hot sauce as a 'passion project' caught in a celebrity feud, undermining its legitimacy as a serious venture.
“Brooklyn launched Cloud23 back in 2024, named after the No.23 jersey his now-estranged father wore at Real Madrid and LA Galaxy.”