The local Albertan, rediscovering what it means to be me. May play devil’s advocate at times, as I like being nuanced.

Enjoys electronic music, adorable art, rhythm games, and perogies among other things.

I have lemmy.world and piefed.world blocked. Sorry, too much American politics and an unfortunate amount of casual transphobia for my liking. Feels like talking to a brick wall with people and I can’t be bothered anymore.

Also have lemmy.ml blocked for transphobia and gross dismissal of human rights issues in China by the admins.

#nobot #AuDHD

  • 86 Posts
  • 123 Comments
Joined 5 months ago
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Cake day: August 29th, 2025

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  • If it helps, there are Conservatives that are getting sick of the shit the UCP has been pulling.

    My grandmother has been a longtime Conservative since she has family that works in the oil sands, and she was telling me when I visited her last that “they need to get rid of Danielle Smith”.

    If she votes NDP I’d be coloured shocked. She’s not the most political person, but she’s very much not the “culture war” type of person as much as she is pro-oil.











  • I swear before the Valley Line the space was like that, even before the library moved out of the mall is the thing. There was the field where the gulls would hang out, but that portion of the parking lot was there well before the rest of the parking area for the transit terminal I recall.

    Quick edit: Found evidence using ESRI WayBack, this is what the area looked like in 2017, right before shovels were in the ground in the area iirc:





  • I am livid. I can not put my anger into words right now.

    The “strong, Conservative woman” claims that her party doesn’t use the notwithstanding clause “unless the stakes warrant it.”

    Right, because clearly the biggest threat in Alberta is trans people. Not lobby money from the oil and gas industry, not the rising cost of living, not the mental health and addictions crisis, it’s clearly a group that makes up 1% at max of the population of the province.

    Calling herself a “strong woman” is so unbelievably rich when all she seems able to do is effortlessly punch down on the everyday person. Like awww, how cute, she’s fighting fucking Big Teacher and Big Hormones, fuck off. “Strength” in defending the status quo requires zero effort whatsoever as it simply means doing fuck all, and I will be unapologetic in saying that she is doing nothing but continuing women’s status as objects by acting as a mere chess piece for the male CEOs in oil and gas and other profitable industries that direct her and the UCP’s decisions through political donations.

    Un-fucking-believable.


  • Binzy_Boi@piefed.catoCanada@lemmy.ca*Permanently Deleted*
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    3 months ago

    I mean, not really, even here in Alberta Calgary and Edmonton have some rather impressive TOD (Transit Oriented Development) projects.

    The Bonnie Doon redevelopment in Edmonton along the Valley Line LRT, and Calgary’s long-term plans for the new Green Line for the Ctrain are great examples.






  • The separation referendum is being stalled by a referendum to stay within Canada, where the petition to start it has already received enough signatures to start the referendum at 456K signatures.

    Polling for separation is laughably low. This is not something that will happen, and not something legally feasible because of Treaty rights, and other numerous legal barriers. Smith herself has admitted she herself does not support separation, but has felt backed into a corner by her base as she fears a party split handing the NDP a win next election cycle more than she does the referendum succeeding, as she sees the former as a far more likely scenario. This can already be seen with the variety of right-wing parties in Alberta as opposed to the province’s left-wing being much more unified behind one party. Basically all this is an issue that could solved by implementing proportional representation in the province.

    The pushback is currently being coordinated, it has only been a week since the back-to-work order, I personally feel it is way too early to judge a lack of action, but regardless students have been pushing back in the meantime the labour movement sorts things out on their end.

    I do appreciate being distinguished as an individual and not as a part of the government or the worst of the crowd that voted them in.


  • Binzy_Boi@piefed.caOPtoCanada@lemmy.caThis place has an "Alberta" problem
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    3 months ago

    Except I am giving facts? The guy said that the NDP was in control of the province for a “long time” before Lougheed was premier. The Alberta NDP never held government before 2015, the Social Credit Party was the ruling party in Alberta for nearly 40 years before Lougheed was premier. This is something that can be easily found through a Google search. He also claimed that Lougheed ran on diversifying the economy, and did nothing to do so afterwards, which is also provably false. The Heritage Fund was founded by Lougheed’s government to save money for investment in sectors, and it was following premiers that squandered that fund to the infamy it holds today.

    So in the midst of implying my intelligence is lacking by stating that the schoolboards here have somehow failed me because I made a simple comment he disagrees with, he also spouts outright misinformation. I gave facts. I gave facts about the current state of affairs in regards to the teacher’s strike in response to someone falsely accusing people here of doing nothing, followed up with my opinion on what can be done, and then was greeted by further insults by someone who was blanketing Conservative views on me from the start for the very nature of where I’m from because they met some people that hold those beliefs.

    Me saying “the rest of country turns it’s brain off”, may have been a little more loaded than I realised, I will take accountability for that, honest mistake on my part.


  • Diversification of the economy is the biggest issue that Alberta needs to address. People here think they want oil and gas development because we’re a single-resource economy, but what they really want is stability and affordability just like anybody else across the country does. Alberta’s reliance on oil is a strength that became a debilitating weakness, and our own leaders, Lougheed to be specific, saw that as the case and wanted to diversify using the Heritage Fund to do so, but this was never picked up on again after the 1980s oil glut until the NDP came to power and tried attracting tech jobs.

    As someone who vehemently supports the federal NDP, I genuinely think that Alberta is a prime example of the party’s failings with working-class people. Farmers are hurting, oil workers are hurting, and as a result everyone else who works other sectors is currently hurting because the province still isn’t doing too great. This isn’t going to be solved by pipelines, and yes, that is in the large part on us for having demanded them so much in the past.

    However people are scared of the shift from oil because there’s literally a cultural connection to it here. That money in the time of Peter Lougheed brought the province insane prosperity, and a lot of that money generated was invested heavily into the arts and cultural staples here. People are fine with shifting away more than you’d think, they just want job security for the people that built the economy of this province that brought us that prosperity and cultural flourish through the transition so that they don’t get left behind like is nearly always the case when industries anywhere go bust.

    When you promise and deliver for working-class people’s wallets, especially in a time of economic hardship like now, they will trust you more than Rebel News mouthpieces and such as they can see that you have cared and delivered for them, and as a result of that, will be more likely to listen to you on social issues such as trans rights, racial issues, immigration, and so on. The issue with the feds is that they always have the same mistake as most people here where they think another pipeline is how you address that, when it only makes Alberta’s boom-bust single-resource economy even worse.

    The worst premiers we’ve had know how to signal economic populism, Smith pretends and postures that she’s fighting for the “Alberta Advantage”, and Ralph Klein absolutely gutted everything in the government under the guise he was getting rid of the province’s debt. As a result of controlling economic narratives, they have been able to control social narratives as well. If the provincial and federal NDP were to hammer economic points time and time over to Albertan voters in an effective manner, they will steal voters, and as a result, then be able to control social narratives.


  • Binzy_Boi@piefed.caOPtoCanada@lemmy.caThis place has an "Alberta" problem
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    3 months ago

    Alright, so despite it being clear that you specifically are against this, but still have a single minor tidbit of information I disagree with, it’s then fine for me to call you a fucking idiot because “this is brought on by ourselves”, right?

    Clearly people have the ability to distinguish the “good” Albertan if they’re literally out here asking to be called names, so why do they have a hard time distinguishing that I’m not someone who supports the stuff happening here when I’m clearly in support of unions by the nature of my comments, my profile description states I have certain instances blocked for transphobia, and my linkstack is on an instance that’s queer-friendly based on the domain name alone?

    Because we all know how much Conservatives and the UCP support… reads notes, unions, trans people, and the marginalised.





  • Read my post and comment history and come back to me. Your “gotcha” is completely hot air and lacks substance.

    Once again, you and everyone here is just hating on me for where I was born and raised, and not on my talking points.

    Prove to me otherwise. You berated people here with insults and blanketed me as “just another stupid conservative Albertan” simply because I decided to say "hey, maybe it’s wrong to call Albertans “fucking pussies” when the facts of the matter are that unions and such are fighting back, but hey, advocating for unions, the biggest conservative talking point ever.


  • More insults without substantive solutions, more failing to address the root cause of issues, more adding to the negativity of the back and forth, and more dismissing people because “it’s so simple guys, just stop” as if that was a viable approach to anything.

    Note how at no point did I insult the feds or voters elsewhere across the country, and yet all the responses insult not just the Alberta government, but Albertan voters, and Albertans in general, all while over-simplifying how to address the issues at hand and dismissing genuine concerns that people here have.

    I’m not a Conservative, but when Liberals and the NDP treat people here like this, it’s not hard to see why they stick to the same each election cycle.


  • You’re blanketing the thoughts of an entire province’s population with those of a handful of people. There’s more than plenty people here that care about work issues elsewhere, it’s why a lot of people came here to begin with. My own family came out this way from Newfoundland because of a lack of job opportunities there at the time, and I know of others from Atlantic Canada, namely New Brunswick, who came this way because of a scarce job market out that way.

    The very reason why there’s this to and fro negativity between Albertans and the rest of Canada is because the government doesn’t push for new job opportunities in Alberta that aren’t related to O&G. What are the feds doing for canola farmers? It is so easy to go out there and support our canola farmers through tariffs on olive oil and other cooking oils, as well as marketing campaigns to Canadian consumers, yet that doesn’t happen. How about supporting struggling sugar beet farmers, who are almost all based in Alberta and the only source of domestic sugar in Canada? It isn’t hard to develop frameworks for a domestic sugar market and develop a Domestic Sugar Policy like every other developed country, and yet we continue to screw over the people who literally feed us because it’s “not politically worthwhile”.

    What about Danielle Smith teasing hydrogen vehicle manufacturing in Alberta? At no point did the feds say “yes, we support more jobs in Alberta, let’s get the ball rolling and work together on this”, leaving Smith backed into a corner of actually needing to do something. At no point have they talked about diversifying the economy in Alberta to help the province out of it’s woes, and at no point have they mentioned any programs to assist oil workers like those in my family who lost their jobs in finding new work, especially after they were left behind by the province like they were despite doing everything expected of them.

    It is painfully easy to fall for someone who tells you how exceptional you are as they make your life worse when the opposite side hasn’t given you the support that you need. It’s also painfully easy to have disdain for the rest of the country as a result of that, but not everybody falls down that path.

    Edit: Making this edit after Carney made the deal with China that benefitted Canadian canola farmers. I admit being wrong in retrospect, and while this will be my only edit to this comment, I’m hoping this trend continues in a way that benefits people here rather than leave them behind as has previously been the case.