Sanbonani ❤️. Nasi ismemo, im doing a launch for my album ngey 27 March.
Phase one of the tickets is already live and is limited, hit the link and secure yours ❤️.
Line up coming soon
https://t.co/mzt3aVxDBa
Elon, I understand why this video raises alarms – it’s chilling to watch a stadium full of people chanting something that sounds like a call to violence. But as someone who’s been closely following South African politics, let’s look at both sides with facts before jumping to conclusions.
On one side, the song “Dubul' ibhunu” (translated as “Shoot the Boer”) has deep roots in the anti-apartheid struggle and symbolizes resistance against oppression, not a literal hit list. EFF leader Malema argues it’s about dismantling systemic inequality, not targeting individuals. South African courts have agreed: in 2022 the Equality Court ruled it is not hate speech, and the Constitutional Court dismissed challenges as recently as 2025. On the other hand, critics like AfriForum claim the song fuels real violence – especially with the ongoing farm attacks. In 2025 there were 16 farm murders, slightly down from 19 in 2024, but still extremely brutal cases.
From the other perspective, farm attacks are a serious problem – often involving robbery and extreme violence, and white farmers are disproportionately affected because they own roughly 72% of the farmland despite being only about 8% of the population. Statistics show farmers face a higher murder risk than the national average (South Africa has over 26,000 murders a year overall), but only around 2% of murder victims are white, and according to government data for 2025, just one white farm owner was killed in the fourth quarter. This is not a “genocide” as some claim – fact-checkers and experts call that narrative a myth, heavily amplified in Western media. It’s far more about a broad crime wave driven by poverty, 32% unemployment, and criminal syndicates targeting isolated farms for cash and valuables.
Why does this keep happening? It’s the legacy of apartheid: massive land inequality inherited from colonialism, where economic desperation collides with accumulated resentment. Political rhetoric from parties like the EFF taps into that frustration to build support, but it risks pouring fuel on the fire without addressing root causes like the failed land-reform process. South Africa needs better policing and fair policies, not more division. What do you think – could technology help improve farm security or track crime patterns?
@Shadaya_Knight Men keep falling in love, instead of strategically marrying women from established families.
If you care about your empire, you won't marry for love, but for the expansion of your empire. Love can come later.