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Saved - April 1, 2024 at 3:14 PM

@k9_reaper - k9_reaper | T.I.A

Another farm attack in South Africa - attacked by 6 armed tango's. When a country accepts this level of brutality as a "normal crime", you should be training.. think about that. https://t.co/EoxLcIH9Ao

Saved - January 17, 2025 at 4:45 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I've been reflecting on the horrific farm attacks in South Africa, drawing parallels to the past struggles in Rhodesia. The bravery of Boer farmers today reminds me of those who faced similar threats in Rhodesia, where isolated families defended themselves against heavily armed attackers. Stories from that time highlight the extreme dangers they faced, often resulting in tragic outcomes. The key takeaway is that isolation can be perilous; forming defensible communities is crucial for safety. As we observe these patterns, it's essential to learn from history to prepare for potential challenges ahead.

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

By now, most everyone has heard of the farm attacks in South Africa They're awful, and it's gut-wrenching to hear stories guys like @k9_reaper have about sickening scenes of torture and death But this isn't the first time we've seen this. Rhodesia had a similar problem A 🧵👇

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

These farm attacks, as a reminder, are absolutely horrific. Here's just one of the stories @k9_reaper has shared:

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

First, nothing in this is meant to diminish from what the Boer farmers in South Africa are dealing with, or to say their problem is less bad They're heroes for how they try to stand up to this evil, and it's incredible they've managed to hold on for so long So props to them, and their story is definitely worth reading about, along with the Rhodesian one

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

So, with that in mind, let's talk about the farm attacks in Rhodesia, as there's a whole lot to learn from them As a reminder, Rhodesia's economy, though industrializing, was primarily agricultural Further, it was a country of great estates. So, there'd be a huge, multi-thousand acre farm like Ian Smith's, perhaps running a cattle operation and growing a cash crop like tobacco.

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

Such a farm would be relatively isolated: a few farm laborers, the family, and the vast veldt around them from which the terrorists could emerge at any moment Like the Boer farmers of today, they were isolated in a hostile world, and frequently under attack Only their attackers weren't just thuggish intruders with r*pe and robbery on the mind. They were highly trained and heavily armed intruders

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

So, your average Anglo family out on the veldt had to be prepared not just to fight the thugs armed with pistols and sledgehammers today's Boer farmers have to deal with, but the same sorts armed with mortars, RPGs, RPDs, and so on The "floppies," as they were called, were heavily armed and ready to use it, so average families had to be armed to the teeth as well

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

And that's just on the farms When driving between the isolated farms, whether to help a family fight off attackers or for a party like in the old days, families had to watch out for ambushes and road mines, effectively necessitating armed and/or armored vehicles for a little jaunt to a friend's house or into town for necessaries

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

There are some wild stories about this time. Families fighting off terrorists shooting at them with RPGs while waiting on the RLI to arrive, etc. One of my favorite stories (I wish I could remember which book it's from), comes from the floppies trying to use a mortar with which they had been supplied: As was sadly usual, the terrorists showed up and the family retreated to the bunker on the farm to wait it out. The rebels then set up the mortar and started trying to use it. A few rounds went wild, then the family heard a thunderous boom. After that, dead silence. A bit later, when the cavalry showed up, they went to investigate. They found that the rebels had been drinking, and forgot to make sure the mortar baseplate was on solid ground. So, as it kept firing, it sunk deeper and deeper into the ground, and the barrel pointed more and more toward the sky. Eventually, it was vertical, but the drunken rebels didn't notice or care. So the fired a round, it went up, and then fell right back on them and detonated the ammunition supply, killing all the rebels and destroying their equipment. Just an average day on the veldt

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

So, such was what the farmers in Rhodesia had to deal with. They were fighting off murderous thugs armed not just with small arms, but with heavy military equipment, which is terrifying, and something that might be coming to South Africa as its state capacity continues declining...

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

Eventually, it proved to be too much. Farmers fled to escape being blown to bits my mortars, and the country gradually ran out of farms and men, weakening the war effort Though the farm attacks were rarely successful, they did aid the rebel cause by frightening Rhodesia's civilian, farmer population out of the country and weakening the agrarian land's economic backbone

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

So, what can we learn from them? The big lesson is that you can't retreat to the middle of nowhere and hope that saves you. When it comes down to it, the enemy is ready and willing to raid the farmland, and if you're isolated, you're exposed to their attacks. That might sound apocalyptic...but it's worth remembering. We don't have RLI Fireforce teams to parachute in and save us. Our government hates us and we're on our own. So, instead of staying isolated, people with their heads screwed on straight need defensible communities and bands of brothers willing to defend them, if it ever comes to it, something of the sort that @untappedgrowth talks about Hopefully that won't come to America, or is at least a long ways off...but the South Africanization of America continues apace, so it's hard not to keep it in mind and try to learn some lessons from the Rhodesian farmers

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

Check out some more awesome Rhodesia pics here:

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

Alright, time for something a bit different for a Rhodesia🧵. Below are my 6 favorite pics from the country and war. If you have others, please contribute them!

@Will_Tanner_1 - Will Tanner

And read here about the West's war on Rhodesia: https://www.theamericantribune.news/p/how-the-united-states-supported-white

How the United States Supported White Genocide in Southern Africa The Problem Elon Called Out is an Old One, and the US is Culpable theamericantribune.news
Saved - August 14, 2024 at 3:45 AM

@OliLondonTV - Oli London

Each one of these crosses represents a White Christian Farmer killed in South Africa. ✝️🇿🇦 Over 4,000 White farmers have been killed since 1994. In 2022 there were over 300 farm attacks and 50 murders. In 2021 there were 415 farm attacks and 55 murders. https://t.co/KDZlnMMjhp

Saved - January 25, 2025 at 1:45 AM

@EndWokeness - End Wokeness

Trump was right again https://t.co/wwcxbTKJl6

Saved - February 3, 2025 at 5:05 PM

@EndWokeness - End Wokeness

Trump is the only world leader speaking up against the land seizures and mass kiIIing targeting white farmers in SA. Where was the UN?! https://t.co/7U25ks4ds9

Saved - February 3, 2025 at 4:38 PM

@BGatesIsaPyscho - Concerned Citizen

🇿🇦 South Africa - The Boer Graveyard Each White Cross represents a White farmer in South Africa murdered from 2018 - 2022 Trump just called this out after years of radio silence from Legacy Media & Political Leaders everywhere https://t.co/tXFCaPFc4C

Saved - February 14, 2025 at 3:43 PM

@twatterbaas - Boer

We are already at war in South Africa. If you have the stomach, listen to my friend Ilene from crime scene cleanup at the end of the clip. She took her family and moved to New Zealand after the things she saw. Please share this to your woke liberals that say Trump and Elon are mad. https://t.co/fmChqkxUL5

Video Transcript AI Summary
We, the black majority, must fight for our freedom by reclaiming our land, seizing the means of production, and redistributing everything equally in a society that prioritizes black people. Peaceful methods have failed to change our lived experiences, and we have been patient for over 400 years. We're coming to take what is owed to us. White people are land thieves with no stake in this society. Farm murders are brutal and intentional, not just robberies. Victims endure unspeakable torture, like nails being pulled out and hands being removed. In one case, a 12-year-old boy was drowned in boiling water by intruders arranged by the domestic worker. The brutality surpasses even the worst movies.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We have to fight in order to attain freedom as the black majority in this country. And the fight has to be located in taking back the land and expropriating back into the people, in seizing the means of production and expropriating everything or rather redistributing everything equally. And a society that would embody a value system that puts black people first. We'll have to be attained through, through, through, through confrontation, unfortunately, through confrontation, unfortunately, because our people have waited for so long. Right? We've waited for so long. Peaceful and and and nothing is happening in terms of changing our lived experience. Right? In fact, the settlers know that very well. So we are already at war. We are already at war. We are our people are at war in farms now. Speaker 1: White people and persons like Breidenbach are land thieves, and they have no stake to this society. And the black majority understands that, and we will respond accordingly. Speaker 0: I think black people have been patient enough for more than four hundred years of colonialism, and we don't want you to feel pity for us. We are coming for you, and we are going to get everything that you owe. It's us. Speaker 2: Four murders are one of the most gruesome kind of crime scenes that we have to deal with, especially while while in South Africa. Four murders are intentional. It's not robberies. It's it's intention the the intention of the attackers is, according to us and what we've seen is to kill. It's been classified especially on the crime stats as well that it's attacks or robberies, burglaries. But because there is no statistic for farmeders, currently, in South Africa, the the brutal the brutality of the farmeders in South Africa is undescribable. We found pieces of nails being pulled out. We found, we found hands being removed from bodies. We found people right murdered, brute brutally murdered, babies, children. The farmers trying to protect their families, and and there's just no stopping. The the farm murders are brutal. Another one that stays with me is in Johannesburg, just outside Johannesburg. We had a farm order where five people came in. It was arranged by their domestic worker, and they drowned the 12 year old boy in boiling hot water. So we had to remove the skin from the bath as as it was peeling off him in the the the hot water. That was a terrible scene. If you look at the worst worst movies ever made, it's not really a patch against what is really going on there. It's unbelievable.
Saved - March 8, 2025 at 6:01 AM

@amuse - @amuse

GENOCIDE: Trump is inviting South African farmers with families that are being targeted based on the color of their skin to come to America. https://t.co/tCfz5DgWV1

Saved - May 13, 2025 at 6:38 AM

@twatterbaas - Boer

South African White farming family destroyed. - grandpa hacked and killed with hammers - father hacked and killed with hammers - mother raped 4 times, with gun next to her head - 13 year old daughter raped and stabbed in neck “Normal crimes”

@twatterbaas - Boer

South African x K9 Policeman opens up about the reality and brutality of the killing of farmers. Listen and share. https://t.co/5okJLZhsuk

Video Transcript AI Summary
In 1995, as a police officer, the speaker responded to a farm attack in Fochville. Arriving on the scene, he saw a girl with a head bandage and her mother in an ambulance. Inside the house, the father and grandfather were dead, hacked with hammers. The walls were smeared with blood and the words "Viva Appla, Viva Ainsia." The family was ambushed after returning from church. The mother was raped multiple times with a shotgun to her head, as was her 13-year-old daughter, who was then stabbed in the head and left for dead. She escaped and alerted neighbors. The suspects were apprehended after a four-day track. The speaker says farm attacks are uniquely cruel, causing PTSD even in hardened police officers. The memories haunt him still. He will share other crime stories from South Africa.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: First farm attack I attended as a police officer back in 1995. First of all, I joined the South African Police Force in 1992 straight out of the Army. I went and joined the police. Right after college, I joined the dark unit where I stayed up until 02/2002. In 1995, we were working. It was a Sunday evening, if if I can remember right, and we received a call that there was a farm attack in the Fochville area. Because of the unit that I was working in, we were the head unit in North West and we are not bound by any jurisdiction, so all the smaller police stations can call us and we can go out and help. We received a call that there was a farm attack and they needed the dogs to track spurs that the perpetrators might have left. As we arrived at the farm, it was very chaotic. There were emergency lights everywhere, emergency vehicles, detectives, ambulances, and I remember getting out of the car. I remember a big ambulance standing on the grass right in front of the house, and as we were walking towards the house, the back of the ambulance was open, and there was a little girl and her mother sitting in the back of the ambulance and the mother was smoking and I thought that's very strange, you're not supposed to smoke in an ambulance. And the little girl had a bandage wrapped around her head like this. But we were walking towards the house and just as we were about to enter the house, they carried out the father and right after the father, they carried out the grandfather. Both of them were hacked to death with hammers and they carried the bodies out. Inside the house it was absolute carnage. With the people's blood there was written on the walls Viva Appla, Viva Ainsia. There was blood everywhere. It actually came out from the carpet. When you stepped on the carpet, blood just came out from under your feet. What happened was the people were returning from church that night and as they went into the house, they were ambushed by five men in the house. The mother was raped four times with a shotgun against her head. Her daughter, 13 year old, were raped three times with shotgun against her head and they had to witness these attacks. After the third time that they raped the little girl, they stabbed her with a knife in the back of the head and they left her for dead and she passed out and they thought that she was dead and they carried on doing wild stuff to the mother. In that frenzy, the little girl came too and she managed to escape the house and run naked, bruised, beaten, stabbed down the road to the farm next door where she asked for help and then they phoned the police. It took us four days. We tracked, we took spurs and we tracked and eventually we did find the suspects. And that was the very first fire attack I attended when I was a young policeman. It is true that when they say hardened policemen witness it and they just broke down, that is the reason why most policemen have PTSD. Now, do understand that everybody experiences crime. There's always crime. It affects black, white, everyone in South Africa. But I've investigated a lot of murders, robberies, housebreakings, home invasions, I've seen it all. But farm attacks is just absolutely next level. The cruelty, I don't have words for what you see. That is memories that I wish I never had, I never wanted them, but that is the reality of what a farm attack is. It's just something different. It's something that stays with you for the rest of your life. That was the first one of many that I attended. Things that I've seen that I cannot unsee and experience. Things that still haunt me twenty years later. I'm not going to tell you what the people's name were for respect of them, their privacy, they've been through enough. But what I saw that night, I never ever want to see again in my life. So, that is in a nutshell what I witnessed that night. I will be putting out other stories as well, crime, explaining what happens in South Africa. But I don't have words. I really I struggle to have words. But thank you for listening and I'll send again.
Saved - March 25, 2025 at 12:43 AM

@RadioGenoa - RadioGenoa

White people in South Africa are not safe. https://t.co/EvNXIABsdy

Saved - May 4, 2025 at 6:18 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared shocking evidence suggesting that the SAPS and ANC government are involved in farm murders in South Africa. A whistleblower claims that SAPS provides information about farms and supplies weapons to those committing these acts. The government appears to be complicit.

@Lolita721611021 - I ❤️ Cape Town ~ I Stand with Russia🇷🇺 MAGA

🇿🇦💥 SHOCKING PROOF #SAPS & #ANC GOVT ARE BEHIND #FarmMurders IN #SouthAfrica A WHISTLEBLOWER DESCRIBES IN DETAIL HOW SAPS GIVES INFORMATION ABOUT FARMS WITH WEAPONS & SUPPLIES THE GUNS TO KILL FARMERS. GOVERNMENT IS 100% BEHIND SA FARM MURDERS @joelpollak @POTUS @BrentBozell @SecRubio

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 1 claims that South Africa is a collapsed country, and that police officers protect criminals by providing them with tools, including guns. Speaker 1 says that if they need tools for a job, they contact their contacts in the SAPS. After the job, they give the police a cut and return the tools for future use. Speaker 1 states that the police sometimes give them information about where to find bigger guns. Speaker 1 claims that the police have asked them to attack specific farms for weapons, and that he doesn't know how the police obtained the information.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We've touched on a couple of subjects. I'm gonna ask you the following. You you mentioned now the police. Have you on previous occasions cooperated or the police cooperated with you, security companies cooperated with you, maybe the defense force cooperated with you or or traffic department? The people who are actually supposed to be to be there to protect. We know there's a lot of corruption there. But do you have first hand experience where these people actually worked and cooperated with you and where you actually maybe shared money with them? Speaker 1: As I've said to you, South Africa is a collapsed country. Those guys, they have they must protect them. But those guys are protecting us. Because look, if I want to go to work now and I don't have the necessary tools for that, then I will simply contact them. We have all we have our guys. Speaker 0: Who's who's them that you will contact? Speaker 1: The SAP. We have our guys there who are working with us. Speaker 0: And from them, you will obtain the tools you mean in guns? Yes. Okay. Yes. Speaker 1: Because they know after the job is done, we give them what we we we have got there. And we bring them back their tools. That's it. Okay. For next time, when you want to use them. Speaker 0: Have you ever been asked by other criminal entities to go and do specifically farm attacks for something specifically. The reason I'm asking, we're looking over here at the Kruger National Park. We know there's a lot of poaching going on there. Have you ever been approached by poachers or so to say, listen here, we want big guns. We need to get us big guns. Is that also one of the motivations for farm attacks? Speaker 1: Listen. It's nice you've tried that one. It's nice you've tried that one. Sometimes, they give they even give us information of where we can find the bigger ones, the bigger guns that we Speaker 0: are looking for. Let me understand this correctly. Criminals or the police? Speaker 1: The police. I'm telling you about my guys. Speaker 0: So in other words, you're telling me the police is giving you information of where weapons are. Yes. But that is confidential information. Speaker 1: I'm telling you this because I I know I'm safe. I'm saying this because I know I'm safe. Speaker 0: So you've been specifically asked by SAPS members in the past to go and attack a specific farm for the weapons there. Speaker 1: Yeah. And and don't ask me how they got the information. I don't know myself. But I got information from them.

@Lolita721611021 - I ❤️ Cape Town ~ I Stand with Russia🇷🇺 MAGA

FARM MURDERS SAPS COMPLICIT https://t.co/FC0VCTxblr

@Lolita721611021 - I ❤️ Cape Town ~ I Stand with Russia🇷🇺 MAGA

@joelpollak @BrentBozell @SecRubio https://t.co/HHees9UHdc

Saved - May 12, 2025 at 8:08 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I’m granting asylum to South African farmers due to the genocide happening there. White farmers are being brutally killed and their land confiscated, yet the media refuses to cover it. It's crucial to bring attention to these issues that are being ignored.

@DC_Draino - DC_Draino

President Trump explains why he’s granting asylum to South African farmers: "It's a genocide that's taking place that you people don't want to write about... White farmers are being brutally killed, and their land is being confiscated... And the newspapers, and the media, and the television media doesn't even talk about it." Media won’t talk about this but Trump will

Video Transcript AI Summary
A genocide is taking place in South Africa that people don't want to write about. Farmers, who happen to be white, are being brutally killed and their land is being confiscated. The media doesn't talk about it, but if it were the other way around, it would be the only story. South Africa's leadership is coming to see me sometime next week. We're supposed to have a G20 meeting there, but I don't know how we can go unless that situation's taken care of. People who live in South Africa say it's a terrible situation. Citizenship has essentially been extended to those people to escape from that violence and come here.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Because they're being killed, and, we don't wanna see people be killed. Now South Africa leadership is coming to see me, I understand, sometime next week. And, you know, we're supposed to have a, I guess, a g twenty meeting there or something, but we're having a g twenty meeting. I don't know how we can go unless that situation's taken care of. But it's a genocide that's taking place that you people don't wanna write about, but it's a terrible thing that's taking place. And farmers are being killed. They happen to be white, but whether they're white white or black makes no difference to me. But white farmers are being brutally killed, and their land is being confiscated in South Africa. And the newspapers and the media, television media doesn't even talk about it. If it were the other way around, they'd talk about it. That would be the only story they'd talk about. And I don't care who they are. I don't care about their race, their color. I don't care about their height, their weight. I don't care about anything. I just know that what's happening is terrible. I have people that live in South Africa. They say it's a terrible situation taking place. So we've essentially extended citizenship to those people to escape from that violence and come here.
Saved - May 23, 2025 at 8:13 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I witnessed my husband being attacked and fleeing to a police station, only to find him beaten by thugs while police officials stood by without intervening. Despite having footage of the incident, we've faced four years of malicious prosecution. Our lives are filled with constant fear due to relentless threats and intimidation. This situation highlights the discrimination and persecution we experience from the ANC and SAPS.

@DeliaByliefeldt - Delia Byliefeldt

When a white South African farmer “successfully” flees from an attack to the nearest South African Police station. I know this to be true, because I’m his wife; the one screaming. This is INSIDE the Police Station. The men beating him are thugs. The people standing around doing nothing are on duty South African Police Officials. Because we have this footage, they have maliciously prosecuted my husband for 4 solid years. We live in constant fear as the threats are relentless and the intimidation unbearable. Another class act of discrimination and persecution by the ANC & SAPS. @POTUS @VP @SecRubio @DepSec_Edgar @elonmusk @TheBabylonBee @visegrad24 @bbleepcun1960 @WillCainShow_ @ShannonChurchi5 @toxiccowboy1 @GuntherEagleman @stillgray @Rightanglenews @ori0n7 @YoteOfStreet @MAGAVoice @IanJaeger29 @OliLondonTV @EndWokeness @RealAlexJones

Saved - May 22, 2025 at 12:02 AM

@WhiteHouse - The White House

🚨 JUST SHOWN IN THE OVAL OFFICE: Proof of Persecution in South Africa. https://t.co/rER1l8sqAU

Saved - May 22, 2025 at 12:02 AM

@GuntherEagleman - Gunther Eagleman™

JUST SHOWN IN THE OVAL OFFICE: Proof of Persecution in South Africa. https://t.co/MF9XMVBm3W

Saved - May 21, 2025 at 9:13 PM

@bennyjohnson - Benny Johnson

President Trump pulls out a massive stack of papers of White farmers who were brutally murdered. He goes through them one by one and calls out South Africa's president to his face: “Death, Death, Death… I'll give these to you." https://t.co/Hc1E8YBA0L

Saved - May 22, 2025 at 4:20 AM

@RealJessica05 - Jessica 🇺🇸

South African President to Trump: We can address these “societal problems” (kiIIng white farmers) if you give us more money. https://t.co/Tpny0p84zs

Saved - May 21, 2025 at 11:40 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I confronted the South African president in the Oval Office about the alarming situation of farm killings and land grabs, presenting shocking statistics. The tension was palpable as I highlighted the rising death toll and the plight of farmers facing violence. I demanded accountability for the hate speech inciting violence against white farmers and criticized the media for downplaying these issues. I pledged U.S. support to address the crisis, urging global leaders to take action. The situation is dire, and the world must wake up to the reality of these atrocities.

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🚨 TRUMP AMBUSHES SOUTH AFRICAN PRESIDENT IN THE OVAL — Cameras roll raw as POTUS confronts him on farm killings and land grabs, brandishing stats while reporters gasp. The tension is electric, the stakes life-or-death. Keep reading—we’re breaking it down now. 1/12 https://t.co/JK3n6SJ11e

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

☠️ Death Toll Mounts — Trump slams flash-cards of fresh funerals across the Resolute Desk, reciting “death, death, horrible death” while reporters squirm. White farmers flee en masse as bodies pile high and the press yawns. Watch the raw nightmare unfold today. 2/12 https://t.co/pE6WTZIX4g

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🌾 Farmers Under Siege — A South African farmer recounts home invasions, arson, and water-pumps stolen by midnight raiders. Elderly parents beaten, families now hide behind electrified fences just to survive. Without farmers, no food—so why global deadly silence? 3/12 https://t.co/jwghDf3wvU

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🔴 Kill Chant Echoes — Viral stadium footage shows 100,000 fists pumping as a firebrand orders “Kill the white farmer!” Ramaphosa shrugs, Trump erupts, brandishing photo after photo of butchered families while demanding arrests. How loud must the mob get before action? 4/12 https://t.co/PURc222RKm

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

⚖️ Land Grab Fury — Trump hammers expropriation laws allowing land seizure “for no payment,” grilling South-African officials on farmers executed after their titles vanish. Thousands beg U.S. asylum; D.C. can’t look away any longer. Will justice finally roar loudly? 5/12 https://t.co/AgHjBlyr97

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🛂 Refugee Double Standard — NBC grills Trump on rescuing Afrikaner refugees while 21 million illegal border-crossers roam free. POTUS fires back: “We take criminals, lunatics, gangsters—don’t lecture me!” His point lands like a thunderclap. Hypocrisy exposed fully. 6/12 https://t.co/TNXOOFAbX6

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

✈️ Media Smokescreen Shatters — NBC tries to derail the farm-murder briefing with a gotcha about a donated Qatari jet. Trump scorches the reporter (“You’re not smart enough!”) and drags execs into the fire. When distraction fails, truth flames higher worldwide. 7/12 https://t.co/2JketxJOY5

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🤝 Allies Seek Help — Ramaphosa cold-calls Trump and is ushered into the Oval. POTUS cites decades-long friendships with South Africans “famous and fearless,” pledging U.S. leverage to stop the bloodshed. Diplomacy ignites when bonds run deeper than global headlines. 8/12 https://t.co/vPIqHElARR

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🏟️ Stadium Warning Bell — Trump cites a 100,000-strong rally calling land grabs a “mass movement” that could end South Africa if unaddressed. He vows to push for resolution, backed by sports legends like Ernie Els pleading for action. Will leaders finally listen? 9/12 https://t.co/V1maEsd0Uy

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

⚠️ Genocide Question Looms — Asked if mass killings meet the G-word threshold, Trump says “I haven’t decided—but saving lives is cheap compared to the consequences.” He cites Rwanda lessons and pushes Moscow, Kyiv, Pretoria—anyone—to act. Is the world awake yet? 10/12 https://t.co/rWyp6NnNn5

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

📰 Fake News Silence — Trump grills Ramaphosa on land grabs and slain farmers, citing gravesites and beheadings while NBC’s “jerk” reporter dodges. He torches ABC, NBC, CBS for burying the horrific massacre, demands prosecutions, and calls fake news an accomplice. 11/12 https://t.co/u1BxcI9fwK

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

📢 FOLLOW REAL NEWS — If you got value from this thread, tap follow and stick with @NextNewsNetwork. We're White House credentialed and deliver unfiltered reports others ignore. 12/12 https://t.co/M8Encelcdo

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🛡️ Strategic Word Choice — Some in the comments took issue with “ambush,” so here’s why we used it: shorthand for a decisive tactical move that forces accountability. Trump’s surprise confrontation shoved farm-murder facts into the spotlight. Hard tactics, vital truth. 13/12 https://t.co/S9iYpTYURV

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

📽️ Proof Exposed — Here's the 4-minute-35-second montage of hate chants against white farmers that played in the Oval Office; Fox cameras caught Trump and the SA president watching it in stunned silence. Hear the words that fuel the violence, then ask: who still denies? 14/12 https://t.co/2k4nOItwmF

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

🎞️ Oval Showdown Uncut — 44 minutes of raw Oval Office exchange: POTUS queues graphic farm-attack evidence, challenges every denial, and pushes for action while cameras keep rolling. No edits, no pundits—just watch, listen, decide for yourself while world watches. 15/12 https://t.co/XlOK396l5h

@NextNewsNetwork - Next News Network 🇺🇲

📺 Media Mask Slips — @JohnBasham torches ABC for dubbing Trump’s “white genocide” warning ‘unfounded,’ ignoring murdered farmers and acting like race killings are rumors. He says ABC has morphed from journalism into a 100 % Democrat activist machine. FACTS. 16/12 https://t.co/xWnxqHfAty

Saved - May 22, 2025 at 5:27 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I watched as Trump made reporters listen to the chants of Julius Milema, a leader I believe is deepening racial division and inciting violence against white farmers. I see Milema as corrupt and exploitative, using racist rhetoric to manipulate a nation struggling with poverty and joblessness.

@undefined - undefined

Trump forced all those reporters there to listen to this & hear the murderous chants of Marxist leader Julius Milema who is doing everything he can to cement racial division & encourage the murder of white farmers. Milema is corrupt & vile & cares nothing for black people - he just uses the racist rhetoric to exploit a nation where people are suffering from poverty,corruption & lack of jobs. This video was as much for the media as it was for the South African President - possibly more.

@undefined - undefined

In the Oval Office, @POTUS confronted South African President Cyril Ramaphosa's denial of the shocking treatment his country's white farmers are facing with video evidence. Watch the video and ensuing discussion in its entirety: https://t.co/SXh5L3i5AN

Saved - May 22, 2025 at 2:14 PM

@Bubblebathgirl - Paul A. Szypula 🇺🇸

South African law enforcer Mkhwanazi: “We have a problem with the black man in South Africa. We have a serious problem.” Violent crime has skyrocketed and is disproportionately committed by blacks. There’s a gen*cide against whites. Legacy media: 😴 https://t.co/k5nJp9OvaD

Saved - May 23, 2025 at 2:26 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
Trump recently addressed the issue of violence against White farmers in South Africa during a meeting with President Ramaphosa, bringing a topic often overlooked by the media to the forefront. He highlighted the plight of Afrikaner farmers and showcased disturbing footage of memorials for victims. Despite attempts by reporters to shift the narrative, Trump remained focused, criticizing the media for their lack of coverage on these events. He emphasized the urgency of the situation, noting the increasing number of South African refugees seeking asylum in the U.S.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

Trump just played his ace card. The media spent years covering up the targeted killings of White farmers in South Africa——because it didn't fit their narrative. He confronted the issue head-on beside President Ramaphosa, under the bright lights of live TV. What happened next left the press scrambling for cover. 🧵 THREAD

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

📍You’ll want to bookmark this thread. This could go down as one of President Trump’s most brilliant 4D chess moves. Let’s break it all down and roll the clips.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

When President Trump welcomed South African President Cyril Ramaphosa to the White House, he didn’t tiptoe around the issue that had been buried for years. He brought it front and center: the brutal attacks against White Afrikaner farmers. “A lot of people are very concerned with regard to South Africa,” Trump said. He made clear this wasn’t just another diplomatic handshake. “That’s really the purpose of the meeting. And we’ll see how that turns out.” Trump pointed to the growing number of South African refugees already arriving in the U.S., saying: “We have many people that feel they are being persecuted, and they are coming to the United States. We take from many locations if we feel there is persecution or genocide going on.” Then, turning directly to Ramaphosa, he added: “Generally, they are White farmers and they are fleeing South Africa, and it’s very sad to see, but I hope we can have an explanation of that because I know you don’t want that.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
Many people are concerned about South Africa, which is the purpose of the meeting. Many people feel persecuted and are coming to the United States. The U.S. takes people from many locations if there's persecution or genocide. There have been a tremendous number of people, especially white farmers, fleeing South Africa. It is a very sad thing to see. The speaker hopes to have an explanation and knows the president doesn't want that. Normally, meetings talk about trade, which will be discussed along with the situation in South Africa.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: A lot of, a lot of people are very concerned with regard to South Africa, that's really the purpose of the meeting, and we'll see how that turns out. But we have many people that feel they're being persecuted, and they're coming to The United States. So we take from many many locations if we feel there's persecution or genocide going on. And we had a lot of people. I I must tell you, mister president, we have had a tremendous number of people, especially since they've seen this. Generally, they're white farmers and they're fleeing South Africa. And it's a, you know, it's a very sad thing to see. But I hope we can have an explanation of that because I know you don't want that. And it's, you know, it's a kind of a different meeting. Normally, we have meetings. We talk about trade. We'll be talking about trade and other things, but that certainly will be a subject that comes up. Yeah.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

Right on cue, the press tried to change the subject. A reporter asked, “Can you explain to Americans why it is appropriate to welcome White Afrikaners here when other refugees like Afghans, Venezuelans, Haitians have all had their protected status revoked?” Trump wasn’t having it. “Well, this is a group, NBC that is truly fake news,” he said. “They ask a lot of questions that are very pointed, where they're not questions, they're statements.” Then he flipped the script: “We've had tremendous complaints about Africa… they say there's a lot of bad things going on in Africa, and that's what we are going to discuss today.” And when it came to refugee policy? Trump dropped the hammer. “When you say that we don't take others, all you have to do is look at the southern border. We let 21 million people become totally unchecked, totally unvetted.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
NBC is "fake news" for asking pointed questions about welcoming white Afrikaner refugees while revoking protections for other groups. There have been complaints about "bad things" happening in Africa, which will be discussed. The claim is that the U.S. does accept refugees, citing 21 million unvetted people crossing the southern border. These individuals allegedly come from all over the world, including criminals, people from prisons and mental institutions, street gangs, and drug dealers. The U.S. is reportedly trying to remove them quickly.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Welcome to white Afrikaner refugees here. Can you explain to Americans why it's appropriate to welcome white Afrikaners here when other refugees like Afghans, Venezuelans, Haitians have all had their protective status revoked? Speaker 1: Well, this is a group, NBC, that is truly fake news. They ask a lot of questions in a very pointed way. They're not questions, they're statements. We've had tremendous complaints about Africa, about other countries too, from people. They say there's a lot of bad things going on in Africa, and that's what we're gonna be discussing today. When you say we don't take others, all you have to do is take a look at the southern border. We let 21,000,000 people come through our border, totally unchecked, totally unvetted. They came from all over the world. In many cases, they're criminals. They come from prisons. They come from mental institutions. They come from street gangs and drug dealers. So don't say that we didn't take them. We take them. We're trying to get them out as fast as we can.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

Before we roll the next clip: if you’re not following me, you’re missing out on critical updates. Hit the bell 🔔 to stay sharp and informed. → @VigilantFox Now, back to the story you came for. https://t.co/ew9jWjvHOe

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

But then came the moment no one expected. A reporter asked, “What would it take from you to be convinced that there’s no White genocide in South Africa?” Before Trump could answer, Ramaphosa jumped in. He insisted the idea of a genocide was false and claimed Trump needed to talk to South Africans who knew better. “If there was Afrikaner farmer genocide,” Ramaphosa said, “I can bet you these three gentlemen would not be here, including my minister of agriculture.” Trump didn’t argue—he pivoted. “We have thousands of stories talking about it. We have documentaries. We have news stories,” he said. “I can show you a couple of things. It has to be responded to.” Then he gave the order: “Turn the lights down and just put this on. It’s right behind you.” On screen was Julius Malema—the genocidal leader of South Africa’s Economic Freedom Fighters party—shouting pure venom into a microphone. “We are going to occupy land.” “Never be scared to kill!” “A revolution demands that at some point, there must be killing! Because the killing is part of the revolution at hand!” “Shoot to kill!” “Kill the Boer, the farmer!” Ramaphosa turned to Trump. He didn’t have an answer. Because there wasn’t one.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 1 states that to be convinced there is no white genocide in South Africa, President Trump would need to listen to South African voices, including those of his friends. Speaker 1 believes that if there was an Afrikaner farmer genocide, his minister of agriculture would not be present. Speaker 0 claims there are thousands of stories, documentaries, and news stories about the genocide. Speaker 0 offers to show articles as evidence. Speaker 1 states that with or without parliament, people are going to occupy land.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What does it take from you for you to be convinced that there's no white genocide in South Africa? Speaker 1: Well, I can answer that for the question. I'd rather have him in. I'd rather answer. It will be Speaker 0: Our president will respond to you. Speaker 1: Thank you, mister president. It will take president Trump listening to the voices of South Africa, some of whom are his good friends, like those who are here. When we have talks between us or the quiet around a quiet table, it will take President Trump to listen to them. I'm not going to be repeating what I've been saying. I would say if there was Afrikaner farmer genocide, I can bet you these three gentlemen would not be here, my minister of agriculture. He would not be with me. So it will take him, president Trump, listening to their stories, to their perspective. That is the answer to your question. Speaker 0: But mister president, I must say that we have no. No. Wait. We have thousands of stories talking about it. Sure. And we have documentaries. We have news stories. And and that is Natalie here? Somebody here to turn that I I could show you a couple of things, and and I would I just I have to it has to be responded to. Yeah. Sure. Yeah. Let me see the articles, please, if you would. And turn excuse me. Turn the lights down. Turn the lights down, and just put this on. It's right behind you. Yohan. Speaker 1: There's nothing this parliament can do. With or without you, people are going to occupy land.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

This wasn’t a fringe voice. Malema leads one of the largest political parties in South Africa. His speeches aren’t isolated incidents—they’re calls to action. His supporters echo the message: “Kill the White farmer.” And it’s working. Attacks are increasing. Families are being driven off their land or worse. Whether Ramaphosa admits it or not, Malema has influence—and a growing following.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

Trump then played the next video. A roadside memorial. Thousands of white crosses. Cars pulled over on both sides of the road in silent tribute. “These are burial sites. Right here. Burial sites, over a thousand of White farmers and those cars are lined up to pay love on a Sunday morning,” Trump said. “Each one of those white things you see is a cross… They're all White farmers, the family of White farmers.” “And those cars aren't driving, they're stopped there to pay respects to their family member who was killed.” “It’s a terrible sight, I’ve never seen anything like it.” Ramaphosa tried to deflect: “Have they told you where that is, Mr. President? I'd like to know where that is because this I've never seen.” But it was too late. The footage was playing. The truth was undeniable.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker describes a scene with over a thousand crosses marking burial sites of white farmers and their families. Cars are lined up on a Sunday morning, with people paying respects to the deceased. The speaker emphasizes the scale of the site, with crosses on both sides of the road, and expresses shock at the number of people killed. The speaker asks if the president has been informed about this location and requests to know where this is, stating "Africa this week."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Now this is very bad. These are the these are burial sites right here. Burial sites. Over a thousand of white farmers, and those cars are lined up to pay love on a Sunday morning. Each one of those white things you see is a cross, and there's approximately a thousand of them. They're all white farmers, the family of white farmers. And those cars aren't driving. They're stopped there to pay respects to their family member who's killed, and it's a terrible sight. I've never seen anything like it. Both sides of the road, have crosses. Those people were all killed. Have they told you where that is, mister president? No. I'd like to know where that is because this I've never seen. Africa this week. We need to find out.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

This was the footage Trump showed. The camera panned overhead. Crosses as far as the eye could see. Cars lined up in silence. The scene stretched for miles. It was devastating. https://t.co/ifFst1Hllo

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

And just when the weight of it was setting in, NBC’s Peter Alexander tried to hijack the moment. “Mr. President, the Pentagon announced it would be accepting a Qatari jet to be used as Air Force One—” Trump snapped. “What are you talking about?! What are you talking about?” Even Ramaphosa motioned to the screen, still reacting to what he had seen. Trump wasn’t done. “You know, you oughta get out of here. What does this have to do with the Qatari jet?” Then he lit into NBC. “We're talking about a lot of other things. It's NBC trying to get off the subject of what you just saw.” Then came the full takedown. “You know you're a terrible reporter. Number one, you don't have what it takes to be a reporter. You're not smart enough… You're a DISGRACE. No more questions from you.” Alexander tried to speak again. Trump shut him down cold. “QUIET! QUIET! QUIET!”

Video Transcript AI Summary
The president stated the Pentagon announced they would be accepting a Qatari jet to be used as Air Force One. He said it’s a great thing and that Qatar gave $5,100,000,000,000 worth of investment in addition to the jet. He then accused an NBC reporter of trying to change the subject and called him a terrible reporter who isn’t smart enough. He said Brian Roberts and the people who run NBC should be investigated for how terribly they run the network, calling the reporter a disgrace and refusing to answer any more questions from him.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Mister president, the Pentagon announced they would be accepting a Qatari jet to be used as Air Force one What are you talking about again? You know, what are talking You you ought get out of here. What does this have to do with the Qatari jet? They're giving the United States Air Force a jet. Okay? And it's a great thing. We're talking about a lot of other things. It's NBC trying to get off the subject of what you just saw. You are a real you know, you're a terrible reporter. Number one, you you don't have what it takes to be a reporter. You're not smart enough. But for you to go on to a subject about a a jet that was given to the United States Air Force, which is a very nice thing, they also gave $5,100,000,000,000 worth of investment in addition to the jet. Go back, you ought to go back to your studio at NBC because, Brian Roberts and the people that run that place, they ought to be investigated. They are so terrible the way you run that network, and you are disgraced. No more questions from you. Go ahead. Go ahead. Talk about that. His name is Peter something. He's a terrible reporter. Quiet. Quiet. Quiet. Quiet. That's my question though. Let's go.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

Trump wasn’t finished. He held up stacks of articles for the press to see. Then read them out loud. “These are articles over the last few days.” “Death.” “Death.” “Death.” “Horrible death.” He flipped through story after story: White South Africans fleeing. Families wiped out. Racist land seizures. Murder. “White South Africans are fleeing because of the violence and racist laws,” he read. “This is one after another. This family was wiped out.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker presents articles and videos depicting violence against white South Africans, claiming white South Africans are fleeing due to violence and racist laws. They cite attacks on white South African couples and the burning of white farmers. The speaker references President Trump's reaction to the situation, mentioning Trump asked about a jet that was given. The speaker claims officials are saying, "kill the white farmer and take their land." They state that friends who left South Africa warned that people there want to take land and kill.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: These are articles over the last few days. Death of people. Death. Death. Death. Horrible death. Death. I don't know. She knows that To pick anyone, white South Africans are fleeing because of the violence and racist laws. And this is all. I mean, I'll give these to you. I'd like to So when you when you say, what would I like to do? I don't know what to do. Just look at this. White South African couples say that they were attacked violently and When the time when will you go and see for yourself if it is violently could do that. Look, here's burial sites all over the place. They're all these are all white farmers that are being burned. President Trump And he asks about a jet that was given. You ought to be ashamed of You know, you're you are so bad. You're such a bad reporter. Mister president This is one after another. His family was wiped out. I I'm just looking. Can we get rid of phone? What's your reaction to those videos, mister president? That's our reaction. Well, I think it's I think the videos are so No. No. When you look at the videos I mean, how does it get worse? And these are people that are officials, and they're saying that, kill the white farmer and take their land. That's what And I have other friends in South Africa. I have people that left. One in particular that says it's you you can't go there. He said they wanna take your land. They take your land, and they kill you.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

South Africa’s very own @elonmusk watched in silence as the horrors unfolding in his homeland played out before him, one story after another. https://t.co/dofcOJ4AvZ

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

Then Trump drove it home. “A correct and a fair media exposes things. But we have a very corrupt media.” “They won't even report this. If this were the other way around it would be the biggest story.” He continued, “Apartheid—terrible. That was reported all the time. This is sort of the opposite of apartheid. What's happening now is never reported. Nobody knows about it.” “All we know is we are being inundated with people, White farmers from South Africa. It’s a big problem.” And he wasn’t the only one alarmed. “Marco Rubio was telling me he's never seen anything like it. The numbers of people who want to leave South Africa because they feel they are going to be dead very soon.” Trump forced a conversation the world had been ignoring. And this time, the media couldn’t look away.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker claims the media is corrupt and refuses to report on a situation in South Africa that is the "opposite of apartheid." According to the speaker, the media constantly reported on apartheid, but now "nobody knows" about the current situation. The speaker states that the U.S. is being "inundated with people, with white farmers from South Africa," creating "a big problem." Marco Rubio reportedly told the speaker that he has "never seen anything like" the number of people wanting to leave South Africa because they "feel they're gonna be dead very soon."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: You know, a correct and a fair media exposes things, but we have a very corrupt media. They won't even report this. If this were the other way around, it would be the biggest story. Now I will say apartheid, terrible. That was the biggest story. That was reported all the time. This is sort of the opposite of apartheid. What's happening now is never reported. Nobody knows about it. All we know is we're being inundated with people, with white farmers from South Africa, and, it's a big problem. Marco Rubio was telling me he's never seen anything like it. The the numbers of people that wanna leave South Africa because they feel they're gonna be dead very soon.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

@elonmusk Thanks for reading. Follow me for more stories that matter. —> @VigilantFox Looking for something else to read? Trump Unleashes Firestorm at Capitol: Shreds the Media and Asks a Question About Biden No One Will Touch https://t.co/bi6oA81jKJ

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

President Trump strolled into the Capitol. No script. No filter. After meeting with House Republicans, he stepped in front of the cameras for a showdown. He unleashed hell. He dropped major details on the Big Beautiful Bill... Then hit the press with a savage question about Joe Biden no one dares to ask. 🧵THREAD

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

@elonmusk A special shout-out to @overton_news for helping with the first two clips in this thread. They’re hands down one of the best news accounts on X. Do yourself a favor and give them a follow! —> @overton_news https://t.co/E8EkIABGiV

Saved - May 22, 2025 at 9:14 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Trump recently confronted South Africa's President Ramaphosa in the Oval Office, showcasing a video of politicians chanting "Kill the Boer" and presenting alarming statistics on farm murders. He described the violence against white farmers as genocide, highlighting the brutal reality of farm attacks, which have resulted in thousands of deaths since 1994. Despite claims that these incidents are merely crime, I argue they reflect targeted ethnic terror. The situation raises concerns about government complicity and the normalization of violence, urging the world to acknowledge and address these issues.

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

🧵 Trump vs. South Africa’s Dirty Secret Trump just embarrassed South Africa’s President on live TV—in the Oval Office. He played a video of politicians chanting “Kill the Boer.” He backed it with brutal stats. He called it genocide. Ramaphosa squirmed. The world watched. (1/25)

Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker says that to be convinced there is no white genocide in South Africa, President Trump would need to listen to the stories and perspectives of South Africans, including his friends. Another speaker claims there are thousands of stories, documentaries, and news stories about it. They show a video of what they claim are burial sites of over a thousand white farmers, with cars lined up to pay respects. They say each white cross represents a white farmer or their family member who was killed. The first speaker expresses unfamiliarity with the scene and asks where it is located. The other speaker says it is in South Africa. The first speaker says they need to find out where it is.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: What does it take from you for you to be convinced that there's no white genocide in South Africa? Well, I can answer that for president. Will take president Trump listening to the voices of South African, some of whom are his good friends, friends, like those who are here. When we have talks between us on the quiet around a quiet table, it will take president Trump to listen to them. I'm not going to be repeating what I've been saying. I would say if there was Afrikaner farmer genocide, I can bet you these three gentlemen would not be here, my minister of agriculture. He would not be with me. So it'll take him, president Trump, listening to their stories, to their perspective. That is the answer to your question. Speaker 1: But mister president, I must say that we have no. No. Wait. We have thousands of stories talking about it. Sure. And we have documentaries. We have news stories. And that is Natalie here? Somebody here to turn that? I I could show you a couple of things, and and I would I just I have to it has to be responded to. Yeah. Sure. We do. Let me see the articles, please, if you would. And turn excuse me. Turn the lights down. Turn the lights down, and just put this on. It's right behind you. Yawn. Speaker 0: There's nothing this parliament can do. With or without you, people are going to occupy land. Speaker 1: Now this is very bad. These are the these are burial sites right here. Burial sites. Over a thousand of white farmers, and those cars are lined up to pay love on a Sunday morning. Each one of those white things you see is a cross, and there's approximately a thousand of them. They're all white farmers, the family of white farmers. And those cars aren't, driving. They're stopped there to pay respects to their family member who was killed, and it's a terrible sight. I've never seen anything like it. Both sides of the road, you have crosses. Those people were all killed. Speaker 0: Have they told you where that is, mister president? No. I'd like to know where that is because this I've never seen. Speaker 1: I don't. Okay. I mean, it's in South Africa this week. Speaker 0: We need to find out. Okay. Mister president, the Pentagon announced they would be accepting

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

“They take the land. They kill the farmer. And nothing happens.” – @realDonaldTrump, directly to @CyrilRamaphosa , on camera. He played Julius Malema @Julius_S_Malema chanting “Kill the Boer.” He showed a sea of white crosses—each one a murdered farmer. (2/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Imagine being home with your family… And this is what happens: •Blowtorched. •Raped. •Gutted with knives. •Shot execution-style. •Left as a warning to others. This is happening in South Africa. Every. Single. Week. (3/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Since 1994: •13,000+ farm attacks •2,000+ murdered •In 1998: 153 farmers killed •Today: 1 farmer murdered per week The murder rate? 4x the national average. (4/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

They say it’s just crime. But “just crime” doesn’t chant, “Kill the Boer.” “Just crime” doesn’t call for the death of white farmers at political rallies. “Just crime” doesn’t target the old, the isolated, the white. This is ethnic terror. (5/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

EFF leader Julius Malema sings it with a smirk: “Kill the Boer, kill the farmer.” Asked if he’d ever call for white slaughter? He smirked: “Not for now.” A SA court called it “heritage” but heritage doesn’t end in body bags. (6/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

In 2025, South Africa passed the Expropriation Act, allowing land to be seized without compensation. White farmers saw it as state-sanctioned theft. This is how it started in Zimbabwe. Trump has now called it out in SA. And he’s right. (7/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

These aren’t isolated cases. They’re the pattern. The proof is victims like: Helen Lotter – raped, disemboweled Sue Howarth – blowtorched, shot Robert Lynn – tortured with an iron This is targeted, racialised brutality. (8/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Farm murder stats: •2018: 54 •2019: 57 •2020: 59 •2021: 55 •2022: 50 •2023: 49 One murder every 6 days. Every year. (9/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Top murder provinces: •Gauteng •Free State •Mpumalanga •KwaZulu-Natal Farmers sleep with guns. And often die defending their homes. (10/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

@AfriForum reports: •15–24% tortured •52% shot •Many strangled, stabbed, or beaten •Conviction rate: 33% Justice is rare. Fear is constant. (11/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

#Trump wasn’t alone: 🇦🇺 Australia offered white farmers visas years ago 🇷🇺 Russia invited Afrikaners in as well 🇺🇸 And then Trump flew 54 SA farmers to the USA in 2025 Why? These #Afrikanerrefugees were fleeing racial persecution. (12/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

@elonmusk called out his homeland’s “hate-based laws” and the rise of anti-white rhetoric. South African officials mocked him Western media rolled their eyes. Trump didn’t. He showed the evidence to the world — from the White House with the cameras rolling. (13/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

This isn’t just about farmers. It’s about what happens when a government excuses hate. When murder becomes routine. And the media covers it up. (14/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Police Minister Bheki Cele claimed: “We can’t protect them all.” So farmers built their own defences. •Patrols •Drones •Radio towers •Panic rooms And still, they die. (15/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Ramaphosa says farm murders are “just crime” and most victims are black. But when politicians chant “Kill the Boer”… And when victims are disproportionately white farmers targeted on their land… That’s not ordinary crime. (16/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

@afriforum and TAU SA data shows: ☠️ Avg. 63 farm murders per year (2010–2019) ☠️ 364 murdered in 6 years ☠️ Torture used in up to 1 in 4 attacks And yet—politicians call this fearmongering. How many more must die before it’s taken seriously? (17/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

In 2023, a South African court ruled that “white genocide” is imaginary. By 2025, over 2,000 white farmers had been murdered. No central plan. But targeted? Yes. If this doesn’t meet the threshold for genocide, what does? (18/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Farms are now fortresses: •Bulletproof vehicles •Guard dogs •Alarms •Body armour This isn’t farming. It’s surviving. (19/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

They’ve lost land, sons, daughters. But they still farm. They still feed the nation. They still stay. Because #SouthAfrica is still their home. (20/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

The press mocked Trump’s video as “awkward.” The regime called it “fake.” But if it’s fake… Why are so many buried under white crosses? (21/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

You won’t see this on CNN. You won’t hear it from the UN. But it just played in the Oval Office, And #Ramaphosa had no words. (22/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

This isn’t just #SouthAfrica’s story. It’s what happens when identity politics and racial revenge are backed by law. And it’s a warning to the West given its obsession with identity politics. (23/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

Every cross marks a life. Every chant fuels the fire. Every silence enables it. Trump broke the silence. Will you? (24/25)

@NationFirstAust - George Christensen

#Trump is right again. This is #Whitegenocide. SHARE this thread. TAG someone who still calls it “just crime.” FOLLLOW ME for uncensored truth. SUBSCRIBE: http://NationFirst.com.au The world must know. The silence must end. #WHITEGENOCIDE2025 (25/25)

Nation First, by George Christensen | Substack Defending our sovereignty & democratic, free way of life. Authorised by G. Christensen, River Street, Mackay. Click to read Nation First, by George Christensen, a Substack publication with hundreds of thousands of subscribers. nationfirst.substack.com
Saved - May 25, 2025 at 10:08 PM

@libsoftiktok - Libs of TikTok

South African leader: “Shoot to kiII, shoot to kiII!” “KiII the Boer, the farmer!” They’re doubling down. Will the media cover this? https://t.co/k3se4mkpbn

Saved - May 27, 2025 at 3:44 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Lara Logan speaks out about the violence against white farmers in South Africa, asserting that the media is downplaying the severity of the situation. She shares her firsthand experiences and historical context, emphasizing the plight of the Afrikaans people and the brutal realities of farm murders. Logan critiques the media's portrayal of these events, linking them to broader Marxist tactics of division. Despite the grim circumstances, she expresses hope for unity, urging the importance of truth in overcoming hate and violence.

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

EXCLUSIVE: Lara Logan Says White Genocide in South Africa Is REAL, and the Media Is Covering It Up When President Trump confronted South Africa’s leader about the farm murders, the media rushed to defend the killers. Or worse, they pretended the murders weren’t happening. But @LaraLogan knows better. She grew up in South Africa. She’s seen the violence, and she’s spent her entire career chasing the truth most people run from. Now, she’s telling the truth they don’t want you to hear—and it’s worse than you think. 🧵 THREAD

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The world watched as President Trump took a bold stand and called out South African President Cyril Ramaphosa over the brutal killings of white farmers. The moment was a spectacle, and you could see Ramaphosa squirm as Trump played the videos. And yet, the media has been bending over backward to downplay what’s happening, insisting that chants like “kill the boer” don’t really mean what they sound like. But you can clearly see people like Julius Malema, leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters, telling people to “kill the farmer.” The media gaslighting has become so absurd that they’re now telling us not to believe our eyes or ears. But someone who knows this story better than almost anyone is @LaraLogan. She grew up in South Africa, lived through apartheid, and has spent her career chasing the truth. Today, she’s here to tell it.

Video Transcript AI Summary
President Trump challenged South African President Ramaphosa about violence against white South African farmers. The mainstream media claims that "kill the boer" is being misinterpreted. Footage of Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema was shown. Award-winning journalist Lara Logan, who grew up in South Africa, will provide historical context. The segment is sponsored by Above Phone, which is having a Memorial Day sale, offering $200 off privacy devices like phones, laptops, and tablets at AbovePhone.com/Pulse. Above Phone offers private apps, secure hardware, and enhanced software, giving users control over their devices. Their team can be reached at +1 836 Monday to Friday from 10AM to 6PM central or via chat at AbovePhone.com/Pulse.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The whole world this week watched as president Donald Trump directly challenged South African president Cyril Ramaphosa over the injustice, violence, and murder of white South African farmers. Since this press conference, the mainstream media has been trying to convince everyone that, quote, kill the boa doesn't mean what everyone thinks it does. Let's take a look at a clip from that press conference. Maybe that wasn't clear enough. Let's take a look at footage from Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema just to be sure. Don't believe your eyes and ears, ladies and gentlemen. Calls to kill and shoot the farmer with actual killings of farmers that follow aren't really what they meant. Well, someone who intimately understands this situation is award winning journalist, Lara Logan, who actually grew up in South Africa, very much remembers the time of apartheid and all that followed since. She joins us today to give us the history and the facts. Before we get into it, our sponsor, Above Phone, is having a huge Memorial Day sale. From now until Monday, you can get $200 off Above's privacy devices at AbovePhone.com/Pulse. That includes privacy phones, laptops, and Above's new tablet. Upgrade your phone now, add a new laptop to your workflow, or grab the new Above tablet and speaker dock. Switch from big tech to freedom tech and join the Above Phone family right now during their big Memorial Day sale at AbovePhone.com/Pulse. All devices are at least $200 off. Thousands of people around the world like me have switched to Above Phone. There are no ads and zero connections to big tech. With private apps, secure hardware, and enhanced software, you'll have complete control over your microphone, camera, sensors, data, and apps. Above's team is ready and waiting to answer your questions. Call +1 836 Monday to Friday from 10AM to 6PM central. Visit AbovePhone.com/Pulse to schedule a call or click on the chat with us button to chat with their team right now. It's time to take back our technology and break free from the growing control grid. Visit abovephone.com/pulse now to go private and save big this Memorial Day.

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#ad: Before we dive in, a quick word from our sponsor—AbovePhone.com/Pulse. Above is running a massive Memorial Day sale. From now through Monday, you can get up to $200 off privacy-first phones, laptops, and their brand-new tablet. Go to abovephone.com/Pulse to take back your digital freedom and use PULSE at the checkout for big savings. These are devices with no adware, no Big Tech backdoors, and full control over your mic, camera, and apps. It’s Freedom Tech, not spyware. Call 1-888-36-ABOVE or visit abovephone.com/Pulse to chat with their team and claim your discount. Go private this Memorial Day—and save big. DISCLOSURE: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase through them, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps keep our work independent. Thank you for your support.

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Lara Logan broke down the history that few are willing to touch. She explained that the Afrikaans people have no other homeland. Their language, their identity—everything about them is rooted in South Africa. They’re not transplants. They’re descendants of Dutch settlers who arrived centuries ago, before the British ever did. She pointed out that history isn’t as neat as today’s narratives pretend. Tribes fought each other for land long before Europeans arrived. “As long as human beings have been on Earth, there has been competition for resources,” she said. And when the Afrikaner farmers ventured out, they didn’t seize established towns or kick people off titled land—they made something out of wilderness. “They were pioneers,” she said, who turned barren fields into fertile farmland and now feed millions across southern Africa.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The Afrikaans people have no other home, and their language is unique to them. They are descendants of Dutch settlers who arrived in South Africa before the British. The speaker argues against rewriting history to pretend that African tribes didn't compete for resources before settlers arrived. They recount a story about Zulu tribesmen questioning why white men cared more about rhinos than their own land. The speaker questions who has a legitimate claim to land, as they believe humanity's presence is increasingly viewed as an aberration. They claim that when farmers arrived in South Africa, the land was uninhabited and transformed into fertile land. They warn of the consequences of governments taking land without compensation, citing Zimbabwe as an example where land seizures led to violence, cronyism, and agricultural collapse. The speaker suggests that simply being Black does not qualify someone to manage a commercial farm.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Well, I think what a lot of people don't really understand is that the Afrikaans people have no other home. They don't exist anywhere else on Earth. They don't know, that that's their natural language. It's not spoken in any other country. It they are descendants of the Dutch settlers that came to South Africa even before the British settlers came there, and that was, you know, some four hundred years ago. Jan van Riebeck, you know, is the famous explorer. I guess he's the the kind of Christopher Columbus of South Africa. And I know that's not a popular term these days because we've decided to rewrite history. And part of rewriting history is pretending that, for example, the African tribes that were already there didn't, you know, regularly murder each other and steal each other's land and push each other off their land. I mean, as long as human beings have been on Earth, there has been competition for resources. And, you know, I was I was actually doing a story for sixty minutes once about rhinos, and I remember these Zulu tribesmen. We were inland from the coast in in a place called Zulu land, and these Zulu tribesmen asked me quite seriously, why do the white men care so much about these animals? And I said, well, don't you love these animals? And they were like, sure we do. You know, of course we love the animals. We've been here with the animals all of our lives, like, since the beginning of time. And I was explaining how, you know, well, they're trying to build these corridors, connect this land so the rhinos have more land. And these guys looked at me, you know, and they said and these are people, mind you, we were two hours from the coast, and they had never seen the ocean. Okay? They had never they're born in Zululand, raised in Zululand, spoke only Zulu, and I spoke enough Zulu to get by. And they just said to me, you know, if this land belongs to the rhinos, what land belongs to us? And this is really a very good question because we live in the time where no land belongs to humanity, where everything humanity does is an aberration. Right? And so it starts with the Afrikaners and the white people in South Africa, and where does it end? Who does have a legitimate claim? Because the farmers, when they came to that land in South Africa, there wasn't anyone living there. There weren't farms. There weren't settlements. They didn't, you know, put a gun to people's heads and and steal their land and take their titles. It wasn't like that. This was they were pioneers who went off into the middle of nowhere, and, and they they turned land that was, wild into fertile land. And there were some 30,000 commercial farmers in South Africa. They feed millions and millions of people, not just in the country of South Africa, but across Southern Africa. So, you you know and there's been recent precedent which has demonstrated what happens when governments take land without compensation. If you look just, to the North of South Africa to a country called Zimbabwe, which used to be Rhodesia under the British, He went through the same thing. Robert Mugabe was the president forever. And once he'd run out of things to steal, what was left? He had to steal the land, and did he give it to people who could farm? Did he go to the foreman who had been running you know, helping the farmers run those that ranch and and give the land to them? No. They didn't. They what they did was they got thugs who went to the farms. They murdered the foreman. They they in fact, they got the farm workers to murder the foreman, and then they went to the next farm, taking some of those farm workers with them and made them murder workers at the neighboring farm. And they did this from farm to farm to farm. They stole the land. They gave it to their cronies. And, you know, you take city people just because you're you're, you know, you're an African, just because your skin is black, doesn't mean you can be taken from the city and transplanted in the middle of nowhere in the rural areas, and you're magically going to know how to how to manage a commercial farm.

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Logan exposed the brutal truth behind the farm killings. She described scenes of elderly victims burned with hot irons, dragged behind vehicles, mutilated with machetes and pitchforks. Children executed in front of their parents. Victims tortured for hours, often with nothing stolen. Then she turned to the rhetoric fueling it. Julius Malema, she reminded us, doesn’t just chant “kill the farmer”—he does interviews where he says, “I’m not calling for the wholesale slaughter of white people right now… but I can’t rule out that that won’t happen at some time in the future.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
South Africans are concerned about issues like potholes, job shortages, and daily power outages. Crime is rampant, and farm murders involve extreme violence, including the gang rape of elderly women. Some believe external forces stir up racial tensions, contributing to the destruction of the country. White farmers face brutal attacks, including rape, torture with boiling water or hot irons, and being dragged behind vehicles. Children are murdered in front of their parents, sometimes without any theft occurring. Political figures incite violence with slogans like "kill the farmer, shoot the farmer," and one leader, Julius Malema, has said "slit their throats," while gesturing the action. He stated he is not currently calling for the slaughter of white people, but cannot rule it out in the future.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The black and white South Africans, you know, are talking about the potholes in the roads. They're talking about the lack of jobs. They're talking about load shedding. I mean, you're not South African if you don't know what it means to have to lose power every day while they, you know, they try to amortize the cost of electricity because there's so many people that don't pay their bills. The crime is through the roof, and the farm murderers, they are amongst the most vicious and bloodthirsty killings you could ever see anywhere. I mean, when you gang rape a woman in her eighties, you know, that is something much more than theft. Speaker 1: Yes. And I I wanna get into some of these stories. What's fascinating to me is it's such a complex history, and it sounds like there was a time of real peace and, you know, homogeny between the people, really. And then you have these like, the the soroses that come in and really cause chaos between the people bringing up ancient Yeah. Ancient racial tensions. I I see similar things here, you know, watching from another country. I lived in Australia before, seeing the stories of the tension between the blacks and the whites in America. And I thought, my gosh. What's going on here? And then I get here, and I meet black people. I meet white people, and everyone's pretty nice. Now I'm not saying that certain issues don't exist or certain racial tensions don't exist. Of course, they do. But but it's a it feels a lot of this feels very, very manufactured in order to systematic systematically destroy a country from within. This is something that we're seeing all over the world, by the way. That's right. And specifically across western nations. But it is definitely what has happened to these farmers is is definitely shocking and has been covered up for a very long time. I was just reading an article earlier about from 2018 about what was happening to the white farmers, and you started speaking there about some of the brutality. You're talking about old women being raped, you know, photographed then the most burned burned with boiling water or hot irons, dragged behind vehicles and shot. Female victims often raped. They were victims would be restrained and tortured, harmed with machetes or pitchforks. I mean, this is Speaker 0: Children murdered in front of their parents, by the way, you know, when there was absolutely no reason to kill the child. And sometimes that violence happens and they steal nothing. Sometimes it's not even about money, you know? And this is this is the thing. I I just what I what I detest about the people that deny that these things are taking place is that, you know, I I just wish for one single moment any of them could experience what it's like to wake up in the middle of the night, and there are people who've come through your bedroom window or come through your bedroom door, and they have murder in their hearts. But they're not gonna make it quick. They're gonna drag it out, and they're gonna make it as painful as they possibly can, cutting off people's ears, gouging out people's eyes. You you know, I mean, it is as brutal as you can possibly imagine. And when you have, people like, you know, political figures that stand up in public and play on people's emotions and say, kill the farmer, shoot the farmer, You know, go after white people. Slit their throats. That's what Julius Malema said. Slit their throats. And he does the gesture. He gets people to gesture with him. And then he sits down and does interviews and says, you know, I'm not rule I'm not calling for the wholesale slaughter of white people right now, but I but I can't rule out that that won't happen at some time in the future. That's what he said.

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Maria Zeee (@Zeee_Media) mentioned how outlets like CNN were spinning all of this as “reparations.” Logan didn’t hold back, saying they deserve to experience the same horrors they so casually dismiss as justice. “They deserve to be in one of those farms in the middle of the night when somebody comes for them,” Logan said. “And they should experience gang r*pe. I have, and I don’t recommend it. And they should also experience what it’s like to witness somebody that you love being tortured to death in front of you. And then we should talk about reparations, okay?”

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 was alarmed to see the MSM, either CNN or MSNBC, defining a certain action as reparations and stating, "This is what reparations means." Speaker 1 stated that certain people should experience being in a farm in the middle of the night when someone comes for them, gang rape, and witnessing the torture and death of a loved one before reparations can be discussed. Speaker 1 does not recommend gang rape, based on personal experience.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: It really alarmed me this week when I saw the MSM. Again, I can't remember if it was CNN or MSNBC, basically saying, this is reparations. This is what reparations means. When you have Speaker 1: clear job to be in one of those farms in the middle of the night when somebody comes for them. And they should experience gang rape. I have, and I don't recommend it. And they should also experience what it's like, to witness somebody that you love being tortured to death in front of you. And then we should talk about reparations. Okay?

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Logan went deeper, explaining that what is happening in South Africa is the same Marxist strategy that’s played out for decades. “These are tactics that have been used over and over and over again to divide people,” she said. “In Algeria, the Marxists used religion. In South Africa, it was race. In America, it was race, too.” The strategy, she said, is always the same. “They keep being used because they’re effective. But you know what they don’t do? They don’t survive over time because only the truth is left standing.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
It's easy to exploit the narrative that someone else is to blame for your problems because it's hard to take responsibility for your life. Blaming someone else allows you to avoid responsibility by playing the victim. These tactics have been used repeatedly to divide people. In Algeria, Marxists used religion by introducing Islamists to exploit, divide, and control society. In South Africa and America, race was used. These tactics are effective, but they don't survive over time because only the truth remains.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I mean, this is a ridiculous narrative. It is an easy one to exploit because it's very hard to take responsibility for yourself and your life. Life is hard for all of us. Okay? And if there's someone else we can blame, if we can be a victim, we're not responsible. So is there somebody that we can blame? These are these are tactics that have been used over and over and over again to divide people. In Algeria, the Marxists used the religion because they introduced Islamists, and that's how they exploited and divided that society and controlled them. In South Africa, it was race. And by the way, in America, it was race. So these tactics, they keep being used because they're effective. But you know what they don't do? They don't survive over time because the only the truth is left standing. That's their simple reality.

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Logan ended on a message of hope. “People do not want to be divided,” she said. That’s why, “Black and Hispanic people are voting for Donald Trump in record numbers because they see through the lies, and they don’t want to be divided.” During the press conference, Trump asked a white South African man if his family felt safe. The man replied that they had installed electric fencing. “That’s not safety,” Maria Zeee said. That’s fear behind a fence. @LaraLogan believes the only way to fix this mess is by telling the truth, loudly, relentlessly, and without fear—because only the truth has the power to bring people together and break the cycle of hate, division, and violence.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Black and Hispanic people are voting for Donald Trump in record numbers because they see through the lies and don't want to be divided. It breaks your heart to see people subjected to racism or racial hatred, and there's no place for that in humanity. At a press conference, Trump asked a white South African if his family members felt safe, and the man said they had put up an electric fence that served them well, but that's not safety. Lara Logan's podcast, "Going Rogue with Lara Logan," can be found on X, Rumble, YouTube, Substack, and LaraLogan.com. Vigilant Fox has been targeted massively with censorship, but people are rallying around him. Trump tariffs, auditing Fort Knox, government shutdowns, escalating wars, and governments running out of money are causing extreme volatility in the markets. Gold and silver act as a safe haven asset and were up close to 18% each in the first three months of the year. Physical assets like gold and silver can never be hacked and will never go to zero. Call Kirk Elliott Precious Metals at (720) 605-3900 or go to KEPM.com/Pulse.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: That's why black and Hispanic people are voting for Donald Trump in record numbers because they see through the lies. Speaker 1: Yeah. Speaker 0: And they don't wanna be divided. People do not want to be divided. Nobody. Even, you know, you might wanna live with your your in your community, but doesn't mean you wanna be at war with somebody else. Nobody wants that. And you know what? It breaks your heart when you see people subjected to racism, you know, or racial hatred. It breaks your heart. It is there's no place for that in humanity, and most people feel that way. Speaker 1: Well, you know, I'll I'll just end on this. I was watching that press conference, and one clip came out of that that didn't go as viral as the others, the press conference from yes Wednesday, of course. And the president Trump was asking a gentleman. He was white, South African. I believe he was there for Ramaphosa, but he asked him, you know, do your do your family members feel safe? And he said, well, look. You know? Yeah. They've put up an electric fence, and it serves them well. And it's like, that's that's not safety, though. And so it's like, this guy is there for Ramaphosa, but, essentially, the truth is exposing these people aren't actually safe. You know? I I think that that's a beautiful example of that. When we have the courage, even in the midst of a difficult situation to to say what's true, it ends up unraveling the entire narrative. So very, very grateful for you, Lara. Thank you so much for your time. You can follow Lara on x at Lara Logan. Please also let people know where else they can follow your work. Speaker 0: Well, my podcast going rogue with, Lara Logan. I'm sitting here on the set. You can see the sign. You can find it on on x, on Rumble, on YouTube, on Substack, and LaraLogan.com. Speaker 1: Thank you again for your time and for giving us that history. I think it's important, especially in a time where the mainstream media is lying so much about this situation. God bless, Lara. We'll see you soon. Speaker 0: Yeah. God bless. And by the way, I saw that you posted that you've been having a rough time lately, and I'm sorry about that. I know you've been subjected to censorship, and I follow you. I'm one of your fans. And so, you know, just hang in there. It happens to the best of us. Speaker 1: Yeah. Vigilant Fox has been targeted massively, massively, but you know what? The people are are, you know, rallying around him and supporting the the efforts of of everything that he's doing. So we're very, very grateful for the people's support. Thank you, Lara. Speaker 0: Okay. Take care. Speaker 1: Trump tariffs auditing Fort Knox, government shutdowns, escalating wars, and governments running out of money. No wonder there is extreme volatility in the markets. Gold and silver act as a safe haven asset in times like these. They always have. In the first three months of this year, gold and silver were both up close to 18% each. And guess what can never be hacked? Physical assets like gold and silver. It'll never go to zero on your bank manager's screen. As global economic tensions continue to heat up, so should safe haven assets like gold and silver. Don't overpay for your stuff and take advantage of the biggest bull market of a generation. Call Kirk Elliott Precious Metals at (720) 605-3900 or go to KEPM.com/Pulse and take advantage of this once in a lifetime opportunity to thrive. Again, that number is (720) 605-3900 or go to KEPM.com/Pulse today.

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@zeee_media Want more from @LaraLogan? Visit http://LaraLogan.com and check out her podcast, Going Rogue with Lara Logan. She pulls no punches, and neither does this full, exclusive interview. Watch it now.

Video Transcript AI Summary
The Daily Pulse discusses violence against white farmers in South Africa with Lara Logan, who provides historical context, noting the Afrikaans people have no other home and were pioneers who made wild land fertile. She draws parallels to Zimbabwe, where land seizures led to violence, economic collapse, and food shortages. Logan expresses disappointment in President Cyril Ramaphosa, accusing him of aligning with Marxist ideologies and enabling corruption. She says Julius Malema is inciting violence, and the mainstream media is pushing a false narrative about reparations. Logan argues that globalist and Marxist forces, including George Soros' Open Society Foundation, are exacerbating racial tensions. She says the roots of South Africa's civil rights movement are anchored in Marxism. Logan says most people reject racism, and the truth will ultimately prevail. She encourages viewers to follow her podcast, "Going Rogue with Lara Logan." The show is sponsored by Above Phone and Kirk Elliott Precious Metals.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Welcome to this special edition of Daily Pulse where we keep your finger on the pulse of the latest breaking news and the news they're keeping from you, brought to you by the Vigilant Fox and Z Media. I'm your host, Maria Z. The whole world this week watched as president Donald Trump directly challenged South African president Cyril Ramaphosa over the injustice, violence, and murder of white South African farmers. Since this press conference, the mainstream media has been trying to convince everyone that, quote, kill the boa doesn't mean what everyone thinks it does. Let's take a look at a clip from that press conference. Maybe that wasn't clear enough. Let's take a look at footage from Economic Freedom Fighters leader Julius Malema just to be sure. Don't believe your eyes and ears, ladies and gentlemen. Calls to kill and shoot the farmer with actual killings of farmers that follow aren't really what they meant. Well, someone who intimately understands this situation is award winning journalist, Lara Logan, who actually grew up in South Africa, very much remembers the time of apartheid and all that followed since. She joins us today to give us the history and the facts. Before we get into it, our sponsor, Above Phone, is having a huge Memorial Day sale. From now until Monday, you can get $200 off Above's privacy devices at AbovePhone.com/Pulse. That includes privacy phones, laptops, and Above's new tablet. Upgrade your phone now, add a new laptop to your workflow, or grab the new Above tablet and speaker dock. Switch from big tech to freedom tech and join the Above Phone family right now during their big Memorial Day sale at AbovePhone.com/Pulse. All devices are at least $200 off. Thousands of people around the world like me have switched to Above Phone. There are no ads and zero connections to big tech. With private apps, secure hardware, and enhanced software, you'll have complete control over your microphone, camera, sensors, data, and apps. Above's team is ready and waiting to answer your questions. Call +1 836 Monday to Friday from 10AM to 6PM central. Visit AbovePhone.com/Pulse to schedule a call or click on the chat with us button to chat with their team right now. It's time to take back our technology and break free from the growing control grid. Visit abovephone.com/pulse now to go private and save big this Memorial Day. Laura Logan, thank you so much for joining us today. We appreciate you being here. Speaker 1: Thank you for having me. Speaker 0: Well, I've been very much looking forward to speaking with you because there has been so much propaganda in the mainstream media. I even heard I don't remember whether it was CNN or MSNBC saying this is reparations. This is what reparations is about, and I am absolutely shocked. So I'd really love to hear a bit of the history about this situation in South Africa, particularly pertaining to the farmers, Lara. Speaker 1: Well, I think what a lot of people don't really understand is that the Afrikaans people have no other home. They don't exist anywhere else on Earth. They don't know, that that's their natural language. It's not spoken in any other country. It they are descendants of the Dutch settlers that came to South Africa even before the British settlers came there, and that was, you know, some four hundred years ago. Jan van Riebeck, you know, is the famous explorer. I guess he's the kind of Christopher Columbus of South Africa. And I know that's not a popular term these days because we've decided to rewrite history. And part of rewriting history is pretending that, for example, the African tribes that were already there didn't, you know, regularly murder each other and steal each other's land and push each other off their land. I mean, as long as human beings have been on Earth, there has been competition for resources. And, you know, I was I was actually doing a story for sixty minutes once about rhinos, and I remember these Zulu tribesmen. We were inland from the coast in in a a place called Zulu land, and these Zulu tribesmen asked me quite seriously, why do the white men care so much about these animals? And I said, well, don't you love these animals? And they were like, sure we do. You know, of course, we love the animals. We've been here with the animals all of our lives, like, since the beginning of time. And I was explaining how, you know, well, they're trying to build these corridors, connect this land so the rhinos have more land. And these guys looked at me, you know, and they said and these are people, mind you, we were two hours from the coast, and they had never seen the ocean. Okay? They had never they're born in Zululand, raised in Zululand, spoke only Zulu, and I spoke enough Zulu to get by. And they just said to me, you know, if this land belongs to the rhinos, what land belongs to us? And this is really a very good question because we live in the time where no land belongs to humanity, where everything humanity does is an aberration. Right? And so it starts with the Afrikaners and the white people in South Africa, and where does it end? Who does have a legitimate claim? Because the farmers, when they came to that land in South Africa, there wasn't anyone living there. There weren't farms. There weren't settlements. They didn't, you know, put a gun to people's heads and and steal their land and take their titles. It wasn't like that. This was they were pioneers who went off into the middle of nowhere, and, and they they turned land that was, wild into fertile land. And there were some 30,000 commercial farmers in South Africa. They feed millions and millions of people, not just in the country of South Africa, but across Southern Africa. So, you you know and there's been recent precedent which has demonstrated what happens when governments take land without compensation. If you look just, to the North Of South Africa to a country called Zimbabwe, which used to be Rhodesia under the British, he went through the same thing. Robert Mugabe was the president forever. And once he'd run out of things to steal, what was left? He had to steal the land. And did he give it to people who could farm? Did he go to the foreman who had been running you know, helping the farmers run those that ranch and and give the land to them? No. They didn't. They what they did was they got thugs who went to the farms. They murdered the foreman. They they in fact, they got the farm workers to murder the foreman, and then they went to the next farm, taking some of those farm workers with them and made them murder workers at the neighboring farm. And they did this from farm to farm to farm. They stole the land. They gave it to their cronies. And, you know, you take city people just because you're you're, you know, you're an African, just because your skin is black, doesn't mean you can be taken from the city and transplanted in the middle of nowhere in the rural areas, and you're magically going to know how to how to manage a commercial farm. Right. That doesn't happen. Speaker 0: You know? These farms are then falling into complete disrepair. Right? There's there's no productivity now happening from them. Speaker 1: Yes. That's exactly right. That's what happened in Zimbabwe. And what happened, inflation went through the roof, food supplies went down, and the people suffered. And it's always the people who suffer. Right? Because the people in South Africa, Black and white, are suffering from the actions of the the government, which came to power, you know, on a wave. Right? This was historic. In 1994, Nelson Mandela was elected as the first black president of South Africa. It was like nothing you have ever seen. I was there. I witnessed it. You know, we were drivers driving around my city Durban. We were waving out the window. People were honking at each other, and I'm talking there was no separation at that point. Black and white. South Africans celebrated the, the end of apartheid and, of course, the rise to power of Nelson Mandela. But, you know, Nelson Mandela was, he was an anomaly because what did he do after five years? That man walked away from power. And he stayed you know, he was alive for a a number of years after that. He could easily have run for a second, term and, you know, and held clung to power with all his might, which is what most people do. But Mandela didn't do that because it was never about power for him. And, unfortunately, the people that came after Nelson Mandela cannot say the same. I'm very disappointed in Siro Ramiposa. I knew him when I was a young journalist. We loved Searle. He was charming, and he was smart, and he was brave. And, you know, we had no reason to think that he didn't mean what he said. In fact, you know, at our office once, someone parked Searle in one of the cameramen I was working with. Cyril parked in one of our, parkings as a news agency, and the cameraman parked him and he didn't know who it was. You know, when Cyril came knocking on the door, he was like, you know, can someone move their car? And we had a good laugh about it, he was, you know, he was very, he was very laid back, and, and he was a great person. And then he became one of the architects of the South African constitution. You know, this is this is a man who did not I mean, nothing that he did for the transition of power in South Africa would have given you an indication that he would be the man today who would have to come to the White House, pretend to be shocked, you know, try to distance himself from Julius Malema, the man who's the head of the the, EFF is the is the party. I I believe it's the Electronic Freedom Frontier, which is just basically Marxist nonsense. Okay? It's mumbo jumbo for I'm corrupt, and I'm a siege of the Marxist. I'm gonna rob my people blind. I'm gonna preside over the genocide of white people. And then when they're all gone and the country is sinking deeper into poverty and misery, I'm gonna get rid of all the black people standing in my way. And that's exactly what you're dealing with. Julius Malema is bought and paid for. And sure, it's not easy to whip people up into a frenzy. What he's doing, okay, is he's playing on the legacy of Nelson Mandela and the ANC, the African National Congress, Mandela's party. And it's a very emotional legacy because, you know, who doesn't believe in, freedom for everyone? Who doesn't believe in equal rights? Who doesn't believe in justice for all? These were noble ideas. Nelson Mandela stayed in prison for twenty seven years. He was offered freedom many times, and he refused to take it because until he could secure and keep the promises that he had made to all of those millions of people who followed him, not just in South Africa but across the world, he wasn't going to take it. Julius Malema is the antithesis of Nelson Mandela and his leggy legacy. In fact, Zoro Ramaphosa, Malema, all of these people have obliterated it. And you know what you see there? I I tell you, you see the hand of the Open Society Foundation and George Soros. Because we didn't know. You know, I was out there as a young journalist, and I was you know, I mean, you white racists were the the the the devil incarnate. You know, they had no right to exist. They had no right to breathe. How dare they? How dare they make a claim to anything? You I was raised in that ideology, and I believed it. I remember my father saying to me once, but, you know, if you're if you believe in tolerance, doesn't that mean you have to tolerate everyone? And I passionately, you know, argue I told my father, no. You you don't have to tolerate these people. Why? He said, why? And I said, because they're evil. You know? And, of course, I I I had no idea. I was young and dumb. I thought I knew everything, and I believed the the, I believed the slogans, and I believed in that ideology. And then, you know, my principles and, of course, that nagging little voice in the back of your head, you know, my father, you know, maybe he's right. What is he what is this about? This doesn't feel right. I know I'm I I think I'm wrong here. Right? This doesn't feel right. I think I'm I might be wrong here because, you know, tolerance actually does mean that. So, you know, I spent time with people, Afrikaans people. I went out to their farms and, you know, and I I actually went to meet with the leader of the Afrikaans, the Afrikaans, who were the devil incarnate at the time. You know, and I learned a thing or two. I learned about, about their history, and I learned about why they don't really belong anywhere else in the world. They don't relate to anything else. I mean, South Africa is their only home. It's their ancestral home, and it's their home today. And by the way, to be a farmer, you know, you have to be a diplomat, a manager, a a business person, an entrepreneur. You need many, many skills because most farmers are not super wealthy. I mean, they're they're land rich, but they're not, you know, cash they're cash poor a lot of the time. And so what do you see? I just saw a video of a white farmer returning to his farm in Zimbabwe, and all the African workers cheering because it you know, the the death of white commercial farming is the death of millions of black people. They know that. Right? And and there are these you know, there are basically these Marxist forces that combine with the globalists and that push the anti Israel, anti Jewish rhetoric, which is very ironic because the Jewish community were partnered hand in hand with the ANC and Nelson Mandela. They were very much part of the liberation of black people in South Africa. And now the Jewish people are, you know, they're they're the big evil. Right? And South Africa is aligned with Iran and with China, and by the way, with a a radical Islamic element. So the this is a country that is rich in resources. The resource I mean, look at the people. Look at the you know, you have Elon Musk. Whether you like him or hate him, the man is changing the world. Right? And it's been a big part of, changing America. And then you have people like Yakoboyans from Yakoboyans Ministries who's a force in the rescue of children who are being trafficked. I mean, there's a number of South Africans that have in fact, there was a South African guy who just won a competition in California as the world's strongest man for, you know, a country that's a tiny little tip on the, at the bottom end of Africa. You know, they they have an outsized influence in the world. I mean, it doesn't get bigger than Nelson Mandela. And and I I, you know so what I would say to you is that this is if you listen to the voices of many South Africans, not those who've been indoctrinated or those who've been bought or paid for, but black and white South Africans, you know, are talking about the potholes in the roads. They're talking about the lack of jobs. They're talking about load shedding. I mean, you're not South African if you don't know what it means to have to lose power every day while they, you know, they try to amortize the cost of electricity because there's so many people that don't pay their bills. The crime is through the roof, and the farm murderers, they are amongst the most vicious and bloodthirsty killings you could ever see anywhere. I mean, when you gang rape a woman in her eighties, you know, that is something much more than theft. Speaker 0: Yes. And I I wanna get into some of these stories. What's fascinating to me is it's such a complex history, and it sounds like there was a time of real peace and, you know, homogeny between the people, really. And then you have these like, the the soroses that come in and really cause chaos between the people bringing up ancient Yeah. Ancient racial tensions. I I see similar things here, you know, watching from another country. I lived in Australia before, seeing the stories of the tension between the blacks and the whites in America, and I thought, my gosh. What's going on here? And then I get here, and I meet black people. I meet white people, and everyone's pretty nice. Now I'm not saying that certain issues don't exist or certain racial tensions don't exist. Of course, they do. But but it's it feels a lot of this feels very, very manufactured in order to systematic systematically destroy a country from within. This is something that we're seeing all over the world, by the way. That's right. And specifically across western nations. But it is definitely what has happened to these farmers is is definitely shocking and has been covered up for a very long time. I was just reading an article earlier about from 2018 about what was happening to the white farmers, and you started speaking there about some of the brutality. You're talking about old women being raped, you know, photographed then the most burned burned with boiling water or hot irons, dragged behind vehicles and shot. Female victims often raped. They were victims would be restrained and tortured, harmed with machetes or pitchforks. I mean, this is Speaker 1: Children murdered in front of their parents, by the way, you know, when there was absolutely no reason to kill the child. And sometimes that violence happens and they steal nothing. Sometimes it's not even about money. You know? And this is this is the thing. I I just what I what I detest about the people that deny that these things are taking place is that, you know, I I just wish for one single moment any of them could experience what it's like to wake up in the middle of the night, and there are people who've come through your bedroom window or come through your bedroom door, and they have murder in their hearts. But they're not gonna make it quick. They're gonna drag it out, and they're gonna make it as painful as they possibly can, cutting off people's ears, gouging out people's eyes. You you know, I mean, it is as brutal as you can possibly imagine. And when you have, people like, you know, political figures that stand up in public and play on people's emotions and say kill the farmer, shoot the farmer, You know? Go after white people. Slip their throats. That's what Julius Malema said. Slip their throats. And he does the gesturing, gets people to gesture with him. And then he sits down and does interviews and says, you know, I'm not rule I'm not calling for the wholesale slaughter of white people right now, but I but I can't rule out that that won't happen at some time in the future. That's what he said. And you have the South African president, it's Urma Pozar, who's gonna sit there and pretend this is about free speech. Could you imagine could you imagine if there was a single white person anywhere in that country that campaigned publicly on the murder of black people? Speaker 0: In any country. That in any country. I mean, it's it's despicable. You don't do that. That's that's that's calling for violence is there are consequences to that. Calling for murder I mean, that person, in my opinion, should be in prison. If you're inciting murder on a mass scale like we've seen him do, that person belongs in prison, that that is beyond the scope of, oh, well, this is just now free speech when you're actually orchestrating this. This is a little bit different. Speaker 1: Yes. And, also, you know, Julius Malema is not struggling. Right? He's not living in poverty. He doesn't live in a shack. He doesn't, you know, have to experience any of the things. He claims to be, you know, one of the workers. He plays on this whole Marxist imagery. He's wearing the red beret and, you know, when he gets his his followers to wear the uniform. If they're, you know, if they're a gas station attendant and they have a uniform to wear, then he gets them to show up in their uniform, tries to make it that we are workers party. But like all of these people that have funding and backing from the Marxists, they never ever seem to make anything better for anyone. I mean, what did BLM do for a single community in The United States Of America? What did they do for, you know, a single city? Right? Or I I mean, just just there there's no evidence anywhere that you can point to and say, wow. That hundred million that Nike gave to BLM, that other hundred million that Bank of America gave to BLM, and so on and so on and so on. Right? I mean, we're talking billions of dollars, and there is not a single black community that is better off today as a result, and that is the same in South Africa. The problem that Saul Ramaphosa has is that he came to power and he did nothing to help his people. And by the way, you know, he never went into the first government in South Africa under Nelson Mandela. He was offered a big contract by Anglo American, and he chose to go to the private sector. We were very disappointed because we really wanted Cyril in that government. You know, he was coauthor, of the of the South African constitution, and, and we thought, wow. This is a guy that can really help lead. And instead, you know, and it was understandable. You were like, okay. I get it. You know, for him personally, he's been a revolutionary. He's been in the struggle, and now this is his time, you know, to build up, and and to prosper. And so when he became president a few years ago, I was six years ago, I believe, I was like, okay. Well, finally, we get Cyril. Please tell me that Cyril is going to make things better, and he hasn't made things better. In fact, what he's done is cozy up to Iran. China has become, you know, more and more dominant as, they've been working these relationships all across Africa. And now South Africa has a really bad problem because they have bankrupt the country, they've bankrupt the infrastructure, and and COVID you know, by the way, COVID was used as a weapon to push countries like South Africa deeper and deeper into poverty. I mean, you wanna talk about, what happened to children's education? How do you take a population where where, you know, I mean, millions of people don't have electricity or running water, and you tell them that they've gotta do homeschool on their computers that they don't have? Speaker 0: Taking a quick break here. While the corrupt federal elite have been quietly building wealth through cryptocurrency, hardworking Americans have been left behind. Today, we wanna tell you about Block Trust IRA. They're bringing access to cryptocurrency wealth to real Americans. Crypto is supercharging president Trump's America first economy, and now you can be a part of it too. 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Speaker 0: And I'm pretty sure it was Ramaphosa that I saw the video of some time ago sort of talking about the privatization of energy, which is why I think this is dangerous, the privatization of electricity in South Africa, which has led to rolling blackouts every single day. And it's not like it's not like they don't expect this. There is a schedule. People have a schedule of when they will and will not have electricity. They have access to it on an on an app. Speaker 1: Mhmm. Yeah. And that's if you have electricity. Right? If you're not living in a shack, some shacks have electricity, but not all of them. Right? In the poorer townships, you don't even have electricity. And, the one thing that I I really think is important for people to understand, the roots of South Africa civil rights movement are anchored in Marxism, just like it is all over the world. And that is by design because Vladimir Lenin sent emissaries all over the world to identify these openings in different countries, and those were exploited. So it it isn't, South Africa isn't suffering because of privatization alone. It's suffering because the people that came to power stole everything they could steal. That's why. And when they were when and and then when they were finished stealing, right, they didn't invest in the infrastructure. They didn't maintain the roads. They didn't maintain the electricity. They didn't fulfill their promises. They didn't build. They stole, and they lined the pockets of a few. And now they wanna blame it on this and blame it on that. It's it's the same playbook. You see this happening all over the world, but the problem is that the globalists and the Marxists are aligned in their efforts to destroy society. So just like in The United States now, what you see is Islam and Islamic terrorism is fully aligned with the Marxist, free Palestine, I hate Israel, I hate the Jews, right, on American campuses. This is not new. This has been happening for decades. Speaker 0: And Soros, by the way, is Speaker 1: long time. Speaker 0: Soros was also behind funding a lot of that. I don't doubt that there are genuine people inside those movements just like there are genuine people inside a lot of movements. But when you look at who's funding the destabilization of societies, it often comes from organizations like Soros, far left organizations like this, Marxist organizations like this. I wanna ask you, though, Lara, because it's it really alarmed me this week when I saw the MSM. Again, I can't remember if it was CNN or MSNBC, basically saying, this is reparations. This is what reparations means. When you have clear job to Speaker 1: be in one of those farms in the middle of the night when somebody comes for them. And they should experience gang rape. I have, and I don't recommend it. And they should also experience what it's like to witness somebody that you love being tortured to death in front of you. And then we should talk about reparations. Okay? Because, you know, reparations only recognizes one side of the history. And the whole truth, just like the whole history, is much more complex than that. Sure. You can absolutely, you know, point to injustice and racism that happened in South Africa. You had an entire system of government that was based apartheid was based on the separation of races. But you but, you know, there was also a joint effort amongst black and white people to build that country from the ground up, and that has been acknowledged by many people. And, you know, you can listen to you can there's tons of black people that are online on social media posting videos and talking who talk all about how I mean, they don't want a racist system of government. They don't want, you know, a racist a system that discriminated against black people to be replaced by one that discriminates against white people. And they understand, you know, that they don't want somebody what did one guy say that you've got somebody, you know, who's who's running the Department of Defense who because she was kicked out of the Department of Education because she wasn't qualified to run that. So how do you have a person like that running the Department of Defense? You know, basically, do you you you put people in charge who have absolutely no skill level, but you put them on charge. You know what you get? You get a country that's run into the ground, and that's where South Africa is today. Speaker 0: Just going back to that the point about the mainstream media really feeding into this reparations nonsense. If you, you have provable reports that literally extremely violent crimes and murders have been committed against white people in South Africa. That is documented despite the fact that they've tried to hide it. It's it's a fact. Yep. And I'm very alarmed by this narrative that this is what reparations equals. It equals murdering people that you're saying are responsible for something that happened, you know, in America a very, very long time ago. And with the increasing race racial tensions that we see, whether it be manufactured or organic, I think that it's a combination of both. I'm very concerned that this is gonna fuel more violence, more hatred within communities. That's that's what I see the mainstream media doing right now. Do you think that that's essentially what they're aiming for right now, further destabilization of America using this? Speaker 1: You know, I I have to be the bigger person here. And I have to tell you, honestly, these people are pathetic. They are desperate. I mean, they have nothing. You have videos and photographs of people bloodied and burned and raped. I mean, I've seen a a picture of a woman raped and dead with her legs spread open and blood everywhere and entrails everywhere. I mean, you know, so, there's so much evidence, and they're clinging to their narrative in spite of a very obvious reality. And that tells you when when people do that, they come from a position of weakness, not strength, Because the true strength is the truth. But when you're when you tell the truth, everybody knows what it feels like. Everybody can knows when you have solid ground under your feet. You don't have to worry. You really don't have to worry. It may be torture, you know, to get through that part where the truth is being suppressed. You may be punished like the people that were sent to prison for January 6 because they stood up for a, what they knew to be a stolen election. You know, you may be like me, you know, kicked off one platform after another because you tell the truth. But at the end of the day, there is no power in deceit. It's a fake power. It's an illusion. When you tell a lie, you gotta keep telling more lies to try to prop it up. There's no shortage of black people in South Africa saying, we don't want this. We don't want it because you know why? I'll tell you what the truth is, that what unites people is far greater than anything that divides them. Have there been racial murders? Yes. Has there been racial injustice? Yes. Dupi is slavery a stain on the history of humanity? 100%. You know? And should we always try to live better and to be better? You bet. We absolutely should try to do that. But you know what? The truth is most people reject racism. Yes. They reject that kind of race baiting and hatred. Now that doesn't mean they're not gonna say something, you know, inappropriate or that they're on stereotypes that people are gonna fall back on. It doesn't mean that people don't want to. We instinctively gravitate towards those who are like us. That is a very human characteristic. It's built into the fiber of our DNA. And you know what? It applies to everything. It's like I tell my kids, if you're overseas somewhere and you meet someone who's from Texas, the first thing you're gonna say is, oh my gosh, I'm from Texas. Hey, blah blah blah blah blah. Right? And if you're not gonna look at whether they're Hispanic or black or white, no. It's gonna be that common ground of understanding. We both come from the same place. We have a shared history together that unites us. What do people want from the person they fall in love with? They want understanding even if you come from two different worlds. Okay. I'm a Christian, and I'm a Muslim, and and we fall in love. What happens, what keeps those two people together over time is that you share and form a common bond of understanding that you truly know me as I am. Like, your husband gives you something that you hate for Christmas, what upsets you? It's not it's not the gift. It's the fact that he doesn't get me. He doesn't understand me. You want it from your friends. You want it from your boss. You want it from your community. You want it from your leaders. We all want that. That's why, you know, a thousand years ago when I was 18 years old and I I moved to New York City, what did I find? Oh, here's little Italy. This is where all the Italians like to be because they all like to be around each other. Oh, by the way, let's go to Chinatown. What do you find in Chinatown? A whole bunch of Chinese people. Are they all racist? Does it mean that they all should be executed at dawn because racist people have no right to exist? I mean, this is a ridiculous narrative. It is an easy one to exploit because it's very hard to take responsibility for yourself and your life. Life is hard for all of us. Okay? And if there's someone else we can blame, if we can be a victim, we're not responsible. So is there somebody that we can blame? These are these are tactics that have been used over and over and over again to divide people. In Algeria, the Marxists used the religion because they introduced Islamists, and that's how they exploited and divided that society and controlled them. In South Africa, it was race. And by the way, in America, it was race. So these tactics, they keep being used because they're effective. But you know what they don't do? They don't survive over time because the only the truth is left standing. That's their simple reality. The truth can survive questioning. It can survive a beating. It can survive a deception operation. It can survive riots. It can survive the devil. Because where does the truth come from? When you shine a light right? When you bring light to something, that's what the truth is. And it stands on its own because it comes straight from God. So you can you can do a million videos, you can pass a thousand laws, you can transition, you can you can medically mutilate and torture as many kids as you like, and they're still gonna be boys. When you put boobs on them, they're still gonna be boys. You know, do what you want. They're still gonna be boys because they're not alter the truth. Speaker 0: The truth Speaker 1: comes from God Yeah. And it cannot be altered. It's not ours. There's no my truth, your truth, that crap. That's nonsense. That's absolute and utter nonsense. That's why the inalienable rights that are bestowed on us from God, that is what is true. Principles, that is what is true, and they never ever change. Speaker 0: Absolutely agree with you, Lara. And, you know, these lies always end up eating themselves. The trans nonsense falls The, you know, the the the race baiting eventually falls over. The evil eventually falls over because it just can't withstand when there is truth out there, which is why it's important to keep telling the truth. We are Speaker 1: so That's why black and Hispanic people are voting for Donald Trump in record numbers because they see through the lies. Yeah. And they don't wanna be divided. People do not want to be divided. Nobody. Even, you know, you might wanna live with your your in your community, but doesn't mean you wanna be at war with somebody else. Nobody wants that. And you know what? It breaks your heart when you see people subjected to racism, you know, or racial hatred. It breaks your heart. It is there's no place for that in humanity, and most people feel that way. Speaker 0: Well, you know, I'll I'll just end on this. I was watching that press conference, and one clip came out of that that didn't go as viral as the others, the press conference from yes Wednesday, of course. And the president Trump was asking a gentleman. He was white, South African. I believe he was there for Ramaphosa, but he asked him, you know, do your do your family members feel safe? And he said, well, look. You know? They they've put up an electric fence, and it serves them well. And it's like, that's that's not safety, though. And so it's like, this guy is there for Ramaphosa, but, essentially, the truth is exposing these people aren't actually safe. You know? I I think that that's a beautiful example of that. When we have the courage, even in the midst of a difficult situation to to say what's true, it ends up unraveling the entire narrative. So very, very grateful for you, Lara. Thank you so much for your time. You can follow Lara on x at Lara Logan. Please also let people know where else they can follow your work. Speaker 1: Well, my podcast going rogue with, Lara Logan. I'm sitting here on the set. You can see the sign. You can find it on on x, on Rumble, on YouTube, on Substack, and LaraLogan.com. Speaker 0: Thank you again for your time and for giving us that history. I think it's important, especially in a time where the mainstream media is lying so much about this situation. God bless, Lara. We'll see you soon. Speaker 1: Yeah. God bless. And by the way, I saw that you posted that you've been having a rough time lately, and I'm sorry about that. I know you've been subjected to censorship, and I follow you. I'm one of your fans. And so, you know, just hang in there. It happens to the best of us. Speaker 0: Yeah. Vigilant Fox has been targeted massively massively, but you know what? The people are are, you know, rallying around him and supporting the the efforts of of everything that he's doing. So we're very, very grateful for the people's support. Thank you, Lara. Speaker 1: Okay. Take care. Speaker 0: Trump tariffs auditing Fort Knox, government shutdowns, escalating wars, and governments running out of money. No wonder there is extreme volatility in the markets. Gold and silver act as a safe haven asset in times like these. They always have. In the first three months of this year, gold and silver were both up close to 18% each. And guess what can never be hacked? Physical assets like gold and silver. It'll never go to zero on your bank manager's screen. As global economic tensions continue to heat up, so should safe haven assets like gold and silver. Don't overpay for your stuff and take advantage of the biggest bull market of a generation. Call Kirk Elliott Precious Metals at (720) 605-3900 or go to KEPM.com/Pulse and take advantage of this once in a lifetime opportunity to thrive. Again, that number is (720) 605-3900 or go to KEPM.com/pulse today. Thank you all for tuning in tonight. We really appreciate all of our viewers. If you haven't noticed, we are committed to telling you the truth no matter what. You can catch us doing that every single weeknight at 7PM eastern. That's every weekday, Daily Pulse, where we keep your finger on the pulse of the latest breaking news and the news they're keeping from you. You can support us to stay independent by shopping directly with our sponsors who make this show possible. Their links are in the description below. You can also like, share, and give us your thoughts and comments on the broadcast. Please also remember to follow Vigilant Fox on Rumble as well as Vigilant Fox on x, and subscribe to Vigilant Fox's Substack to keep up to date with deep dives on the latest news. You can also follow Z Media on Rumble where we post our long form interviews, deep dives, and investigations. Follow us on X at z triple e underscore media, and all of our content is also on ZMedia.com. Join us every weeknight at 7PM eastern. Tell everyone about it. 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Home - Lara Logan TV Renowned, award-winning journalist Lara Logan is back-this time, on her own terms. Going Rogue with Lara Logan is a fearless new podcast that takes you beyond laralogan.com

@VigilantFox - The Vigilant Fox 🦊

@zeee_media @laralogan Thanks for tuning in, and Happy Memorial Day. We’re taking Monday off to honor the brave men and women who gave everything for this country. But don’t worry, The Daily Pulse returns Tuesday with a brand-new episode you won’t want to miss. We’ll see you then. https://t.co/YRyiWUOGPU

Saved - May 26, 2025 at 7:19 PM

@TRobinsonNewEra - Tommy Robinson 🇬🇧

ADMIN POST. Only days after Trump called out South Africa's President over white farmers being mass murdered. Julius Malema leads EFF rally with chants of: "kill the Boer, the farmer". Genocidal scum! https://t.co/Oss4d2ujGN

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