The Western Journal

His Best Takedown Yet? Trump Orders Lights Dimmed, Forces S. African President to Watch Brutal Persecution of Whites

Teh article discusses a recent Oval Office meeting between President Donald Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, focusing on the controversial topic of the treatment of white farmers in South Africa. During the meeting, Trump accused the South African government of allowing violence and discrimination against white farmers, referencing an executive order he had issued too offer special refugee status to Afrikaners. ramaphosa denied the existence of a genocide against farmers, leading to a tense exchange where Trump showcased a video highlighting instances of violence against white farmers in South Africa. The video included inflammatory rhetoric from South African political figures advocating for land confiscation and violence. While Ramaphosa acknowledged issues of crime in South Africa, he emphasized that violence affects people of all races. The article highlights the complex socio-political dynamics surrounding the issue and Trump’s strategy of drawing attention to it on an international stage.


President Donald Trump turned in another of his Oval Office must-see performances during a sit-down Wednesday with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.

When one thinks of the 47th president’s most memorable Oval Office meetings, certainly his showdown with former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer over border wall funding in 2018 comes to mind.

And who can forget the takedown of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy when he tried to pressure Trump into giving a greater security guarantee?

But now comes Trump versus Ramaphosa over the treatment of white South African farmers.

In February, Trump issued an executive order establishing a special refugee status for Afrikaners, who are victims of unjust racial discrimination, including threats of violence and land confiscation.

During the Oval Office meeting, Ramaphosa denied that there is a genocide taking place in his country directed at white farmers.

Trump responded, “We have thousands of stories talking about it. And we have documentaries. We have news stories.”

“Turn the lights down and just put this on. It’s right behind you,” he said to Ramaphosa, as the room became quiet while the video played.

South African politician Julius Malema came on the screen, calling for the confiscation of land and the murder of Afrikaners. “A revolution demands, at some point, there must be killing,” he said.

“Shoot to kill, kill the Boer, the farmer,” Malema chanted before a cheering crowd in a stadium.

The BBC reported, “Malema, the leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party, is a fierce critic of what he sees as ‘Western imperialism’, and also advocates the nationalisation of white-owned land in South Africa.”

A different black man also could be heard in the video compilation calling for land to be confiscated. “If they object, they can seek [to be] a refugee in America,” he said. Whites make up about 7 percent of South Africa’s population.

In January, South Africa enacted a law that allows the government to confiscate land without compensation in some cases or for “just and equitable” payment in others.

Regarding the killing of farmers, data compiled by the Transvaal Agricultural Union of South Africa — a commercial farmers’ union made up mostly of Afrikaners — shows that there were 32 farm murders in 2024, down from 50 in 2023 and 43 in 2022. There have been a total of almost 2,300 farm murders since 1990.

Factcheck.org noted that most, if not all, the farmers murdered were white.

Trump also held up articles he said were from the last few days in South Africa reporting about the killings. “Death, death, death, horrible death,” the president said as he leafed through them.

During the meeting, South Africa’s Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen, who is white, confirmed that white farmers are experiencing violence.

“We have a real safety problem in South Africa. I don’t think anyone wants to candy-coat that,” he said.

But he emphasized that the two individuals shown in the video are minority party leaders, including Malema, and they do not represent the policy of the governing African National Congress Party.

Ramaphosa added that he denounces the rhetoric of those minority leaders shown in the video.

“There is criminality in our country,” the South African president conceded. “People who do get killed, unfortunately, through criminal activity, are not only white people, [the] majority of them are black people.”

Trump definitely displayed, once again, his ability to raise the profile of an issue and force the media to cover it.




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