Anti-White Discrimination at Yukon Hospitals & B.C. Parks

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Anti-White Discrimination at Yukon Hospitals & B.C. Parks

[The degrading of the European  founding/settler people of Canada increases every day. The perpetrators are our own treasonous elite. The latest: the Yukon’s three hospitals will now practise segregation with privileged parking spaces reserved for native Indians. Another slap in the face to the Whites who pay the overwhelming majority of the taxes.The justification?  “These spaces are one way we are show­ing our com­mit­ment to Truth & Recon­cili­ation, Decol­on­iz­a­tion & Indi­gen­iz­a­tion.”

The soul-sickening, phony White guilt pervades the hospitals approach. 

“Sys­temic racism and intol­er­ance is per­vas­ive and deep-rooted . … We know it is present in Canada, in the Yukon and in our com­munit­ies. It exists within our hos­pit­als and health care sys­tem,” reads the agency’s 2022-2027 stra­tegic plan. Yes, “systemic racism” directed at the overtaxes, White dispossessed Majority.

Meanwhile in neighbouring British Columbia, Whites will be excluded from certain provincial parks they pay for for certain times this summer. “

One of the more con­tro­ver­sial was the B.C. gov­ern­ment agree­ing last year to begin clos­ing select pro­vin­cial parks to non-indi­gen­ous users.

Just this week­end, in fact, B.C. is set to shut off pub­lic access to Botan­ical Beach, a pop­u­lar sec­tion of the Juan da Fuca trail. Accord­ing to a state­ment by the B.C. Min­istry of Envir­on­ment, the 72-hour clos­ure is being done “to give mem­bers of the Pacheedaht First Nation time and pri­vacy to har­vest mar­ine resources, con­nect with part of their ter­rit­ory.”

A much longer clos­ure is also being ordered for Jof­fre Lakes Pro­vin­cial Park, which will be closed between June 20 and 27, and then again between Sept. 8 and 30. “These peri­ods will provide space for the Lil­wat Nation and N’quatqua to con­nect with the land,” reads a dis­claimer on the park’s offi­cial site.” (National Post, June 16, 2026) 

n Cana­dian first, Yukon cre­ates race-based park­ing

YUKON POLICY IS TO ASK PATIENTS INDIGENOUS STATUS TO ACCESS SPECIALIZED SERVICES

Tri­stin hop­per16 Jun 2026

As part of their stated com­mit­ment to “decol­on­iz­a­tion and Indi­gen­iz­a­tion” in health care, the Yukon is deb­ut­ing Indi­gen­ous-only park­ing spaces at all three of its hos­pit­als.

In a social media post last week, Yukon Hos­pit­als announced that the ter­rit­ory’s hos­pit­als would hence­forth fea­ture reserved park­ing spots marked “Respect­fully Reserved for Eld­ers.”

Reserved exclus­ively for “First Nation, Inuit, and Métis Eld­ers,” the spaces are marked with signs fea­tur­ing com­mis­sioned art from two Yukon-based Indi­gen­ous artists; one pre­pared a styl­ized image of two eld­ers, while another pre­pared the accom­pa­ny­ing text read­ing “respect­fully reserved for eld­ers.”

“These spaces are one way we are show­ing our com­mit­ment to Truth & Recon­cili­ation, Decol­on­iz­a­tion & Indi­gen­iz­a­tion,” reads a descrip­tion by Yukon Hos­pit­als.

The elder spots are set to be installed at the ter­rit­ory’s main hos­pital in White­horse, as well as at the Dawson City Com­munity Hos­pital and the Wat­son Lake Com­munity Hos­pital. Park­ing for every­one at all three hos­pit­als is free.

They will be placed in lots whose only other des­ig­nated park­ing is cur­rently for staff or dis­abled users. Although the White­horse Gen­eral Hos­pital not­ably has des­ig­nated RV park­ing: a ser­vice for patients from dis­tant com­munit­ies driv­ing in for sched­uled pro­ced­ures.

Yukon Hos­pit­als, like many Cana­dian gov­ern­ment and health-care author­it­ies, has pub­licly embraced the notion that its facil­it­ies are shot through with “sys­temic racism” that can only be alle­vi­ated via dif­fer­en­tial treat­ment for mar­gin­al­ized groups.

“Sys­temic racism and intol­er­ance is per­vas­ive and deep-rooted . … We know it is present in Canada, in the Yukon and in our com­munit­ies. It exists within our hos­pit­als and health care sys­tem,” reads the agency’s 2022-2027 stra­tegic plan.

That same plan has the hos­pital author­ity pledging to make “Yukon First Nations ways of know­ing, doing and being part of everything we do.”

Up to one-third of patients at White­horse Gen­eral Hos­pital are Indi­gen­ous, accord­ing to a Yukon Hos­pit­als estim­ate in a 2016 news­let­ter.

And the ter­rit­ory, like B.C., has a policy of ask­ing patients their Indi­gen­ous status in order to access cul­tur­ally spe­cific ser­vices such as tra­di­tional food or “tra­di­tional medi­cine.”

The sys­tem is largely based on the hon­our sys­tem, however. The patient guide­book to the White­horse Gen­eral Hos­pital notes that the facil­ity’s admit­ting desk will “ask every patient if they would like to identify as First Nations, Métis or Inuit.”

“This will ensure that all per­sons that self-identify will have access to our pro­grams,” it notes.

The threshold of Indi­gen­ous-only park­ing spots is a new one. Not just in the Yukon, but in Canada gen­er­ally.

In fact, the Indi­gen­ous-only spots appear to be Canada’s only instances of pub­lic park­ing spots being set aside based on the immut­able char­ac­ter­ist­ics of the driver.

The closest ana­logue would be instances in both Ger­many and South Korea where pub­lic park­ing spots were set aside exclus­ively for women. Ger­many has been installing women-only park­ing spots since the 1990s, fol­low­ing a wave of viol­ent sexual assaults tak­ing place in park­ing gar­ages.

The spots, labelled “reser­viert fuer frauen,” are typ­ic­ally in well-lit areas loc­ated close to build­ing entrances. No such “she-spots” or “Frauen­park­platz” are known to exist in Canada, although there are spots for expect­ant moth­ers, or par­ents with young chil­dren.

The Yukon park­ing spaces do fit within a lar­ger trend of Indi­gen­ous Cana­dians being given pri­or­ity access to pub­lic spaces in the ser­vice of recon­cili­ation.

One of the more con­tro­ver­sial was the B.C. gov­ern­ment agree­ing last year to begin clos­ing select pro­vin­cial parks to non-indi­gen­ous users.

Just this week­end, in fact, B.C. is set to shut off pub­lic access to Botan­ical Beach, a pop­u­lar sec­tion of the Juan da Fuca trail. Accord­ing to a state­ment by the B.C. Min­istry of Envir­on­ment, the 72-hour clos­ure is being done “to give mem­bers of the Pacheedaht First Nation time and pri­vacy to har­vest mar­ine resources, con­nect with part of their ter­rit­ory.”

A much longer clos­ure is also being ordered for Jof­fre Lakes Pro­vin­cial Park, which will be closed between June 20 and 27, and then again between Sept. 8 and 30. “These peri­ods will provide space for the Lil­wat Nation and N’quatqua to con­nect with the land,” reads a dis­claimer on the park’s offi­cial site.