Don't really think it will, in the case of Senekal most of the farmers have more "class", Brackenfell you're going to have a bunch of people assaulting the EFF, and I would bet that people from Kraaifontein would come over.
So it would probably be what Malema hoped would happen in Senekal.
Then rubber bullets and stun grenades are in order and in summary of that day.
Just the other day Malema made a little boy out of Pharmacy Direct's CEO, and you know the funny part, it wasn't PD's fault for not paying out the TERS because legally they weren't allowed to. They literally quoted the law when Malema came by for his 'oversight' visit, and effortlessly Malema scored political points by coming to an 'agreement' with the company to pay the money back to labour for the employees to self-claim, but if push comes to shove (legally) then the company would have reimbursed the monies anyway because it is how the law works. It was simply a process bounded by law. Nonetheless, it was the CEO at the end of the day who went home with pie on his face and Malema the more popular.
I pity the employees now, money going back into a department which is inefficient, corrupt and reeks of negligence...
To get back on topic, Malema works the landscape with fine orchestration.
The people of Brackenfell and its surroundings can still proof me wrong. It is just that from my life experiences most people tend to talk a lot more than they can act. Things like liquor seems to help those putting words into action.
I do agree, that the EFF may push many minority groups into civil disobedience which may escalate into something more, how can I say, warring? It is a real possibility, the state themselves are applying too much pressure and it is getting worse. It is politics which are now the barometer of the minorities' volatility.
Minorities at the end of the day is being gaslighted by the majority, and many like I is frankly having enough of it. This is a truth.