White South African farmers face brutal attacks while the world stays silent. These hardworking families are targeted for their land and heritage, left unprotected by a government more focused on politics than justice. Recent reports show farmers are three times more likely to be murdered than police officers, with attackers using torture and rape as weapons of terror.
Julius Malema, leader of the radical Economic Freedom Fighters, openly chants “kill the farmer” at rallies. This hate speech fuels violence against white communities while global media outlets look away. The ANC’s land expropriation policies have created lawlessness, inviting criminals to seize property through bloodshed rather than legal process.
Load-shedding blackouts leave farms defenseless, cutting power to security systems during nightly attacks. Gangs exploit these darkness hours to ambush families, knowing police response times lag in rural areas. Many victims endure hours of torture before being executed, their cries unheard due to isolated farm locations.
Despite claims from South African officials that most victims are Black, independent data reveals white farmers face disproportionate violence. Activists argue genocide criteria are met through systematic destruction of Afrikaner culture and livelihoods. The UN turns a blind eye, prioritizing political correctness over protecting minorities.
Former President Trump stands nearly alone in calling out this crisis, demanding action while European leaders stay mute. His administration recognized the pattern of racial targeting, challenging the false narrative that these are random crimes. Globalist media outlets smear truth-tellers as racists rather than reporting the horrors.
ANC policies have collapsed agricultural output, once Africa’s breadbasket. Food shortages loom as skilled farmers flee or get murdered, their knowledge irreplaceable. Government seizures of productive land often leave it fallow, punishing success while rewarding violent theft.
Surviving farmers arm themselves with rifles and guard dogs, forming neighborhood watches against endless threats. They describe a warzone where children sleep in panic rooms and school buses carry armed escorts. Yet international journalists label them “privileged” instead of documenting their plight.
Patriots worldwide must demand protection for these persecuted communities before another generation is erased. Silence equals complicity in this slow-motion genocide against people who feed nations and preserve Western values. The time for diplomatic whispers is over—lives hang in the balance while criminals rule the veld.