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A graphic titled “My first 2 townhall questions on APP” displays two prepared questions in bold text regarding the Alberta Pension Plan (APP). Each question is prefaced by a microphone emoji and a subtitle.

Town Hall Question #1: On DEI and the CPP
This question challenges the claim made in a government video that DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) affects Canada Pension Plan (CPP) investments. It states that there's no public evidence CPP uses DEI to guide investments and asks for specific evidence. The speaker questions how DEI would undermine pension returns or Alberta's economic benefit, even if such influence existed.

Town Hall Question #2: On Regional Scapegoating and Consistency
This question criticizes the portrayal of CPP as flawed due to its administration from Ottawa and Toronto. It asks whether any service not based in Alberta is considered untrustworthy and provocatively inquires whether all banks and financial services should also relocate to Alberta. It concludes by suggesting that the narrative sounds more like a push for separation from federal systems than just pension reform.

The tone is direct, thoughtful, and aims to hold policymakers accountable for vague or ideologically framed claims.

A graphic titled “My first 2 townhall questions on APP” displays two prepared questions in bold text regarding the Alberta Pension Plan (APP). Each question is prefaced by a microphone emoji and a subtitle. Town Hall Question #1: On DEI and the CPP This question challenges the claim made in a government video that DEI (Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion) affects Canada Pension Plan (CPP) investments. It states that there's no public evidence CPP uses DEI to guide investments and asks for specific evidence. The speaker questions how DEI would undermine pension returns or Alberta's economic benefit, even if such influence existed. Town Hall Question #2: On Regional Scapegoating and Consistency This question criticizes the portrayal of CPP as flawed due to its administration from Ottawa and Toronto. It asks whether any service not based in Alberta is considered untrustworthy and provocatively inquires whether all banks and financial services should also relocate to Alberta. It concludes by suggesting that the narrative sounds more like a push for separation from federal systems than just pension reform. The tone is direct, thoughtful, and aims to hold policymakers accountable for vague or ideologically framed claims.

The #AlbertaPensionPlan pitch is biased, vague, and full of word salad 🥗. Danielle Smith keeps resurrecting old, broken arguments 🧟‍♀️. No clarity, just spin. I’m working on my town hall questions 🎤—most likely will never get a change to ask. #APP #ABpoli #PensionNotPropaganda #ShowYourReceipts

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