I think part of the negative perception comes from the way Alberta has historically voted. Go back and look at past federal elections (I stopped at 1962) and you'll see the majority of the Alberta, if not all of it, elects nothing but right-wing MPs (PC/CPC/Reform/Alliance). Look elsewhere in the country (Ontario, Quebec, NS) and you'll see that over the decades, they have switched between supporting Liberal/Conservative/NDP/PQ depending on the election and what was going on in Canada at the time. So, there could be a explainable and justifiable reason why Alberta ended up this way (so this isn't a claim to say that Alberta/Albertans are wrong in who they chose to elect), but it does makes Alberta/Albertans appear to be extremely partisan, voting not for the person/party that is actually best suited to lead and deal with the issues of the day, but instead voting conservative "because that's what we do." And honestly, while I don't think that this is the case, the loudest mouth breathers from Alberta are certainly not helping to disqualify my hypothesis; when you roll around with F*ck Trudeau stickers everywhere and blame literally everything on Trudeau (not the LPC, Trudeau himself), it makes it seem like people from Alberta aren't actually thinking critically about issues, and instead are just blaming everything on Trudeau, because they're from Alberta and that's what Albertans do.