Lex Libertas
Media Statement, 23 June 2026
Lex Libertas launches ‘Stop Crypto Control’ campaign against sweeping state powers
PRETORIA – The think tank and advocacy group, Lex Libertas, has launched its new Stop Crypto Control campaign in opposition to the Draft Capital Flow Management Regulations, 2026, warning that the proposal would grant the Minister of Finance and National Treasury sweeping powers over the lawfully acquired crypto assets of citizens. This is, according to Lex Libertas, an unjustifiable attempt at centralisation and government control, which would be to the detriment of society at large.
The proposed regulations provide for broad executive discretion, undisclosed thresholds and measures that could compel people to dispose of their crypto assets. Lex Libertas warns that these provisions pose a serious threat to property rights and financial freedom.
Dr Ernst Roets, executive director of Lex Libertas, said lawfully acquired crypto assets are private property and should enjoy the same basic protection as other forms of property.
‘The state should not have the power to arbitrarily restrict, control or compel the sale of assets that people have acquired lawfully. This is not reasonable regulation. It is an unacceptable expansion of state power over private property and personal financial decisions,’ Roets said.
Lex Libertas will submit formal comments on the draft regulations. For this reason, the organisation has opened a public campaign and urges everyone concerned about property rights, financial freedom and growing state control to add their voices.
The Stop Crypto Control campaign can be supported on the link below.
The campaign forms part of Lex Libertas’ broader work to defend basic freedoms, property rights and decentralisation against the continued expansion of centralised government control.
Lex Libertas is a think tank and advocacy group working towards a viable political dispensation in South Africa, based on the principles of freedom, decentralisation and self-governance.
@BatmanTweetzz@grok Grok cooked it perfectly 🔥
Google Maps = “I know where you go, what you eat & who you meet”
Apple Maps = “I’ll tell you the way but your privacy stays home” 😭
One collects your soul, the other respects it.
Which one you using daily? Drop it 👇
🚨 IS SOUTH AFRICA A FAILED STATE?
As the country marks “Freedom Day,” questions are growing:
• Over 190,000 people murdered since 2018
• Violent crime continues to rise year over year
• Widespread issues with electricity and infrastructure
• Water shortages affecting multiple regions
• Corruption scandals and governance failures
• Declining public trust in institutions
• Ongoing economic and unemployment pressures
At the same time:
The government is pursuing international legal action against Israel at the ICJ...like they have nothing better to do.
So the question stands:
Is South Africa a failed state?
Stay connected, follow @MOSSADil.
This is a declaration of WAR against the White minority.
In this SABC clip, Cyril Ramaphosa addresses the ANC Youth League conference, urging them to abandon docility and reclaim the “militancy of the 1944 era and the 80's/90's.”
He declares, “We don’t want young people who are asleep during a revolution. You’re the revolution.”
This is the same party that defends “Kill the Boer, Kill the Farmer,” the chant used while attackers stabbed Amanda Platt with a spear in a recent farm attack.
Calling for militancy while farm murders continue is INCITEMENT given the acts of terror the ANC was responsible for during, (and before) this period.
Here is a short list of the remarkable achievements by the South African ANC government since 1994.
The only question that remains is how in the hell they’re still in power?
Leo Prinsloo. Former Captain in the South African Police Service Special Task Force, which is the country’s equivalent of the SAS, involved in everything from counterterrorism to security details for two US presidents and the Queen of England.
After leaving the service, he became a tactical training instructor and took on part time work as an armed security escort in Pretoria.
On April 22, 2021, on the N4 highway in Pretoria, his cash in transit vehicle was ambushed by a heavily armed gang who opened fire and began a high speed chase. Prinsloo immediately took evasive action, weaving through traffic, ramming one of the attack vehicles, absorbing multiple rounds through the bulletproof glass, and driving himself and his partner out of the kill zone.
When the vehicle eventually stopped, he grabbed his rifle, exited the truck, and set up an ambush of his own. The robbers saw him kneeling down to take aim and fled without taking a single rand (dollar).
His partner Lloyd Mtombeni was on only his fourth day on the job. The dashcam footage went viral worldwide, and tens of millions of people watched it. Prinsloo downplayed his actions and said the real heroes are the cash in transit workers who face these risks every day.
The South African laws are literally super racist, plain and simple.
It’s not complicated: imagine if the law was called “White Empowerment”, instead of “Black Empowerment”! People would have a seizure 😂
South Africa now has more anti-White laws than Apartheid had anti-Black laws. Think about that for a second …
The current South African government has objectively implemented Apartheid 2.0. Shame on them.
"It's been a 30-year blackout on what's happening in South Africa. They've been excluded in media from the rest of the West."
The NYYRC is leading a delegation to South Africa to expose what @60Minutes and the rest of the Fake News Media won't cover.
Yesterday, we visited Eden Academy in Pretoria, which gives Christian, Afrikaans lessons to students who are kicked out of other schools for their race, religion, and language.
This is what 60 Minutes will never show you.
Starlink has committed to a R500 million investment to connect 5,000 rural schools with free, high-speed internet, benefiting more than 2.4 million learners each year.
But it is still on hold.
Why? Because South African regulations require 30% local Black ownership for telecom licenses.
South African farmers and rural communities are asking the government to approve Starlink. In many remote areas, there is no internet access at all, and people have to drive several kilometers just to get basic connectivity.
The South African government is the enemy of its own people.
Today, AfriForum announced that we are suing the South African government over their attempt to hijack healthcare through NHI.
We held a press conference at the abandoned Kempton Park "ghost hospital," because why simply describe the potential future under NHI if we can show it?