Farm Attacks

I don't know whether this has been posted anywhere.


In support of POTUS Executive Orders, DRL just returned from a trip to South Africa to learn more about rural farm attacks and the breakdown of rule of law. Here’s what we found:

South Africa holds enormous economic and geopolitical promise. However, current breakdowns in law and order are not conducive to growth or collaboration with the United States. The South African government must speak clearly and act decisively to address crime and condemn the violence.

Violent crime is rampant in South Africa, but rural attacks—especially on farms—display a distinctly brutal pattern. Local sources reported 296 farm attacks and 49 murders in 2023, and that victims are disproportionately elderly, isolated, and face delayed police response. The South African Police Service reports the number increased to 55 farm murders in 2024.

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These are not ordinary crimes. In some documented cases, reports detail victims tortured or killed without anything being stolen.Earlier this year, a man was beaten and hacked with a machete; in another incident, an elderly woman was assaulted and repeatedly stabbed. In both cases, no theft occurred. These attacks are not motivated by poverty alone.

In a notable 2023 incident, assailants chanted “Kill the Boer, Kill the Farmer” as they stabbed their victim. But these aren’t fringe slogans—some South African leaders chant the same words to cheering crowds.In one case, graffiti praising these leaders was painted on a farmhouse before its owners were brutally attacked. Despite this, as POTUS highlighted earlier this year, many South African leaders have failed to condemn this song.


The international community and mainstream media have decided to remain silent on this issue. Rejecting this moral failure, the United States condemns these brutal attacks and stands with all South Africans working to build a peaceful and more prosperous country.
 
This is from Afriforum own research about farm murders.
We only report it if the attackers get away. Successes have been increasing since we got organized. Pork sales and dog food sales have also been going up.
 
Most private farmland remains in the hands of the white minority, while most farm workers are black and poorly paid, fuelling resentment among the black population, while many white farmers complain of high crime rates.

~ BBC
Perhaps someone can confirm something for me, since I'm not familiar with the details.

Is there any evidence either the shooting or the feeding of the dead bodies to the pigs was motivated by race?

It would be quite ironic for the BBC to describe what happened as fueling resentment among the black population, before there is evidence that either the shooting or the feeding to the pigs was race-based.
 
I thought Afriforum was a group formed specifically to protect/raise awareness of minority rights issues.

Yes, they're the same as the migrant vigilantes over here.

Only interested in events that drive their agenda.
 
If a minority kills and feeds a majority to pigs, don't you feel that could end up impacting on the other minorities in one way or the other?
I think you're getting a little carried away.

Unless, as I said, there is evidence to suggest this was a race-motivated shooting, anyone shouting and wringing their hands on social media, as though they did have evidence, is part of the problem.
 
Yes, that's probably right.

Why would they be driving anyone else's agenda?

People should generally prefer the truth over moronic agendas.

Morons prefer the agendas as it gives them something to cling to.
 
People should generally prefer the truth over moronic agendas.

Morons prefer the agendas as it gives them something to cling to.
Why is morons preferring their own agenda to someone else's a bad thing?

Is it because they have the political power to force that agenda onto the unwilling?
 
Why is morons preferring their own agenda to someone else's a bad thing?

Is it because they have the political power to force that agenda onto the unwilling?

It's not a bad thing. People falling for the rubbish is the bad thing.

It's fine in business as it keeps people employed, in politics it's something else.
 
It's not a bad thing. People falling for the rubbish is the bad thing.

It's fine in business as it keeps people employed, in politics it's something else.
I would have thought that politics keeps moronic people employed.... otherwise morons would not be employed ... until they stopped being morons.
 
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