President Trump exposed the brutal truth about South Africa’s white farmers during his Oval Office meeting with President Cyril Ramaphosa. He showed shocking videos of farm attacks and demanded action to stop the violence. While global elites ignore this crisis, Trump stands with hardworking families targeted for their race and land.
Farm murders have plagued South Africa for decades, with over 2,300 killings since 1990. Last year alone saw 32 farmers slaughtered—many tortured before death. These aren’t random crimes. Radical groups openly call for seizing white-owned farms, fueling racial tension.
South Africa’s government claims there’s no genocide, but their courts can’t hide the bodies. A 2025 court ruling called white genocide “imagined” while victims’ families bury loved ones. Police data avoids tracking race, making real numbers hard to find—a convenient cover-up.
Elon Musk, born in South Africa, backs Trump’s stance. He warns that violence and racist laws are driving white families to flee. Globalists attack Musk and Trump for speaking out, but patriots know the truth: silencing defenders won’t stop the bloodshed.
The leftmedia tries to debunk Trump by pointing to South Africa’s overall crime rate. Yes, 45 murders happen daily per 100,000 people. But targeting farmers destroys food supplies and terrorizes communities. This isn’t “crime”—it’s cultural eradication.
Ramaphosa claims most murder victims are Black. That’s a distraction. When armed mobs chant “kill the Boer” while burning farms, it’s racial warfare. Trump rightly calls this evil by its name while weak leaders make excuses.
America’s State Department admits white farmers face targeted attacks. Yet woke bureaucrats downplay it as “high crime rates.” Patriots see through the lies. When thugs hack families to death with machetes, it’s not petty theft—it’s hatred.
Trump’s boldness forces the world to confront South Africa’s Marxist land-grab agenda. The left fears this truth because it exposes their global plan: erase property rights, inflame racial divisions, and silence dissent. Real leaders don’t look away from genocide—they fight it.