Alberta now hiring digital ID manager

The Canadian province of Alberta is now hiring for the position of a digital ID manager, according to a job opening posted by the government this month. 

As reported by Frontline News, digital ID is a critical component to the World Economic Forum’s (WEF) globalist agenda, also known as the “Great Reset”. It entails a digital transformation of countries and their citizens, which requires three elements: digital IDs, digital payments and data governance.   

“Digital ID, digital payments, and data governance are each important individually. Together, they add up to a powerful public good,” says the WEF on its website.   

Many have pointed out that they add up to total control by governments such as the Chinese Communist Party, which imposes its authoritarian social credit system using the above three elements.  

Few leaders have expressed more enthusiasm for the Great Reset than Canada Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 

Now, the province of Alberta is searching for an Executive Director, Platforms to manage its new digital ID program. The job description contains the very elements promoted by the WEF. 

“Your priority is to build and manage platform services like digital identity, digital payment, notification and engagement, user-experience data collection, and content and document management,” the job description reads. “You’ll succeed by establishing and scaling teams that are iterative, user-centred, data-driven and focused on digital delivery with Cloud-era ways of working.” 

The salary offered is $4,801.47 - $6,310.03 bi-weekly, or $125,318 - $164,691 per year. 

The position would be part of a new governmental department called the Digital Delivery and Innovation Division.  

“Service Alberta's Digital Delivery & Innovation Division is a new organization within the government of Alberta,” the government says in the About Us section. “The Division is responsible for developing and continuously improving all new citizen-facing digital services, in partnership with Ministries across government. Our mission is to change the way government interacts with citizens.” 

Oddly, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney claimed to not know what a digital ID is during a live Q&A session on Facebook last week. 

“I honestly don’t know what you’re referring to (or) what the digital ID is,” Kenney said. “I just don’t know where that’s coming from,” he added, calling plans to implement digital IDs an “internet, urban legend,” according to the Western Standard. 

While the MyAlberta Digital ID has existed since 2015, it is only available for public services. The Alberta government now seeks to make it available for use in the private sector, which would provide the government with more private data, including transactions.