She doesn’t even bother to try and hid who pays her off.She never has. She’s a corrupt greedy evil cruel ugly bigoted piece of floor crossing back stabbing lying Nazi frac shit.
@bianca0908.bsky.social:
Where are Albertans!Even more stupid, greedy and corrupt than Dildo Danielle is, and she knows it. Rural Albertans will vote her an even bigger majority next election.
@nestedpistordoll.bsky.social:
Is it dumb if you are servicing your actual constituents and not the morons who elected you?
@albertagirl67.bsky.social:
Gryphon (crypto out of Las Vegas founded 2020) bought 850 acres near Calgary from Captus Energy for their operation. Don’t know what Danielle is going to do about the huge amounts of water data centres need. 47% of Alberta is in drought conditions & 27% is abnormally dry. Stupid is bottomless.
@steve1970peng.bsky.social:
They will pass that on to residential customers!
Watch!
Data centre firms want clarity on Alberta’s ‘surprise’ AI infrastructure levy by Murad Hemmadi Sep 2, 2025, The Logic
Alberta’s plans for a new “server tax” on AI data centres and energy rationing could hamper the province’s efforts to attract new investment in digital infrastructure, industry executives claim. …
Alberta introduces new levy framework for AI data centres, A new levy on large-scale data centres is coming to Alberta by Kajal Dhaneshwari, Aug 28, 2025, Lakeland Today
Alberta is introducing a levy framework for large-scale data centres to attract investment, create jobs and ensure (while harming with zero compensation ordinary Alberta landowners with severe water loss and or shortages, horrific noise, air pollution, abusive law violations like those by Persist Oil & Gas) Nazi American tech billionaires, oil, gas and frac companies, and only richAlbertans benefit from thisincredibly satanic stupid huge investment ripoff bubble fast-growing sector.
Effective Dec. 31, 2026, a two per cent levy on computer hardware will apply to grid-connected data centres of 75 megawatts or greater. This framework was shaped through a six-week consultation with industry stakeholders and reflects Alberta’s commitment to fairness, competitiveness and long-term prosperitybut only for the rich and richer.
To maintain Alberta’s position as one of the most attractive jurisdictions in North America, the levy will be fully offset against provincial corporate income taxes. Once a data centre becomes profitable and pays corporate income tax in Alberta, the levy will not result in any additional tax burden.
“Alberta’s government has a duty to ensure Albertans receive a fair deal from data centre investments,” Minister of Technology and Innovation Nate Glubish said. “This approach strikes a balance that we believe is fair to industry and Albertans, while protecting Alberta’s competitive advantage.”
Alberta’s government is also exploring options, to be developed with industry input, to provide cost stability, including a payment in lieu of taxes program that would allow companies to make predictable annual payments instead of fluctuating levy amounts, and a deferral program to ease cash-flow pressures during construction and early years of operation.
“After working closely with industry, we’re introducing a fair, predictable levy that ensures data centres pay their share for the infrastructure and services that support them,” President of Treasury Board and Minister of Finance Nate Horner said. “This approach provides stability for businesses while generating new revenue to support Alberta’s future.”
To ensure consistency across Alberta communities, data centres of 75 MW or greater will be formally recognized as designated industrial properties, with property values assessed by the province. Land and buildings associated with data centres are subject to municipal taxation, and municipalities may offer property tax incentives or deferrals for up to 15 years under existing provisions of the Municipal Government Act.Wanna bet data centre owners will copy negligent oil and gas firms, and will refuse to pay their taxes?
This framework builds on the Alberta Artificial Intelligence Data Centre Strategy, introduced in December 2024, which positions Alberta as a destination of choice for AI infrastructure. Alberta’s unique advantages – including natural cooling efficiencies, low-cost electricityexcuse me? Alberta has the highest electricity costs in Canada, and we are roasting here because of global warming, in extreme multi year long drought with severe water shortages for communities already before AI invades! and a competitive tax system – make it an ideal location for data centre development, offering investors both certainty and a predictable tax landscape.One always knows ordinary citizens will be ripped off, and abused when the Alberta or federal gov’t promise predictability. Douche Fucker Dildo Danielle.
@seandunn.bsky.social:
This was explicitly a policy pushed by Ben Harper. He wrote a policy paper for the Canadian Blockchain Consortium on it.
(His cousin is also working for the Alberta Government right now and tied up in a different controversy…)
@philstr.bsky.social:
Is it me, or has she managed to get through that healthcare scandal relatively unscathed?The legal judicial industry is intentionally super slow, by the time the health scandal case gets to trial, there will be no public health care, only a for profit Nazi Amerikkka rape your health industry, and Smith and her owners, Nazi USA, tech billionaires, and oil, gas and frac, will have destroyed what’s left livable in Alberta. Also, Alberta has one hell of a lot of dirty judges, intentionally plunked on its racist misogynistic bitumen-soaked bench to serve rich law violators
@thedaddyotaku.bsky.social:
Renewable energy projects: Can’t do. Too unsightly.
AI data centres: Come! Bring your own nuclear generators. Welcome to the hundreds of millions of gallons of water necessary to cool the things. Nah, doubt it’ll affect anything. If it does, we’ll use MONEY to fix it. Or pretend it’s not happening. Or blame someone else.
“Create jobs”? We’re just going to gloss over the reason AI is such a hot commodity, are we? Or do we turn a blind eye because it will create a few short term construction jobs in our neck of the woods?
DVR Aug 28, 2025:
Wind and solar consume taxes.
Data centers generate taxes.
And therein lies the rub.
Barb H. Aug 28, 2025:
Your response got me thinking, so I did a little checking.
Here’s some interesting stats about China and India (thanks, ironically, to AI, which cited the International Energy Agency).
Last year China met its 2030 capacity target for wind and solar energy. 6 years early. (Yeah, the coal sector has also grown. No one’s perfect.) It invested USD$625 billion in renewables.
So far this year India has invested USD$11.8 billion in renewables. In 2024, 83% of their total power sector investment went to clean energy.
Apparently, some countries consider these a good use of tax dollars.
@DanKnightMMA Sep 9:
Electricity prices in Canada just posted one of their sharpest spikes on record. According to Statistics Canada, the national electricity selling price index jumped 22% between July 2024 and July 2025. For ordinary Canadians, that means the average household power bill, roughly $1,800 a year, has climbed to about $2,200. Four hundred dollars more for the exact same electricity.
Small businesses are being hit even harder. Users under 5,000 kilowatts, think family farms, restaurants, auto shops , saw costs soar 27% in a single year. That’s thousands of dollars added to operating costs, money they don’t have.
Wages didn’t go up 22%. Inflation didn’t go up 22%. But hydro did. And this is happening while Mark Carney and the Liberals are bragging about “climate competitiveness.”
In reality, their policies are making the basics of modern life unaffordable.Carney and his ilk are just keeping up with our citizen raping Nazi neighbours.
Refer also to:
2024: Watch Alberta’s electricity prices jump higher and higher after data centres by Nazi billionaires invade:
Read more on ernstversusencana.ca

