Hey @elonmusk keep your star link bud! @realDonaldTrump pick a corner and whine for a sec!!!!
This is South Africa 🇿🇦 hands off our country, set your prospects on another one to bully!!!!
_"My name is Elon Musk. I'm a racist, an Apartheid apologist and beneficiary, a liar & the devil in human form. I'm so mad Apartheid ended in South Africa, so i will keep telling lies about that country even if nobody believes me. That's the reason i bought X"_
Namibia has made it clear that if Elon Musk wants Starlink to operate, He must comply with local laws that require 51% local ownership. Elon Musk has been vocal in criticising South Africa’s 30% BBEE requirements, calling it extremely racist, yet Namibia’s requirement is stricter
And Masaule also got onto the polygamy train with a son
Lest we forget!
But why Macelzy is trying for this point to be valid, should tell her one thing…. Earth-linking is a liar!!!! 😅
And I don’t get her relevancy in trying to justify ukuthi Musa said he’d never marry anyone that has a child while she can clearly see he did ngo Mangwabe, she just wanted to get back at Thobile nje by airing her sgaxas akukho okuye! 🚮🚮🚮#UthandoNesThembu
I lowkey feel she was softening her dad for the pregnancy announcement….
Which better way than feeding further into his delusion - trying to make herself an “ally” of some sort
There may be some that may not like me saying this, but I stand for the truth. There is no white genocide in South Africa but farm attacks and murders are real, unique, and demand specialised action.
Let’s set the record straight: there is no white genocide in South Africa. That claim is factually incorrect and distracts from the very real crisis that does exist — the ongoing, targeted, and uniquely brutal attacks on our country’s farming communities.
The facts speak for themselves: farm attacks affect people of all races, white, black, coloured, and indian. What makes these attacks different is not the race of the victims. It’s the nature of the disproportionate violence (sometimes torture), the location (isolation), certain political rhetoric, celebration by some on social media and the economic implications that make them a national priority.
Farm attacks are uniquely savage. Victims are often tortured for hours. Some are tied up and beaten, raped and even tortured to death. Some attacks can carry on for hours. In some cases even children have been murdered. In some cases, very little of significance is stolen — but something far worse is taken: safety, dignity, and life.
These aren’t random crimes. They are calculated, often executed by organised syndicates who take advantage of the remote and isolated nature of farms. Help is far away. Law enforcement is stretched thin. The result? Criminals act with impunity — and communities are left traumatised and vulnerable.
This is why the Democratic Alliance (DA) has fought for years to place rural safety at the top of South Africa’s national agenda. And finally, this week, Parliament has formally acknowledged the truth — farm attacks are real, and they must be addressed with urgency.
Two parliamentary portfolio committees, Police and Agriculture have adopted a report that includes several DA-led recommendations:
-A Specialised Rural Safety Unit in SAPS;
-Stronger crime intelligence focused on rural syndicates and cross-border networks;
-Prosecution-led investigations to increase conviction rates;
-Better collaboration between police and community safety structures like farm watches;
-And, crucially, formal recognition of the uniquely brutal nature of farm murders.
This is not about creating a hierarchy of victims. Every South African life is equally valuable. But to respond effectively to crime, we must understand its context, and farm attacks do have specific, repeated features that set them apart.
These attacks strike at the heart of South Africa’s food security, job creation, and rural economy. When a farmer or farmworker is murdered, the impact is felt across the entire agricultural value chain, and across every dinner table in the country.
The DA remains fully committed to justice, safety, and dignity for all who work the land. We call on the Minister of Police to act now. Rural communities can’t wait any longer. What they need is not only sympathy, they need protection, prosecutions, and political will.
@EndWokeness On Trump’s next visit to South Africa, I’d love to see a documentary on the history of the KKK and its modern-day echoes in America played for him. Let’s see how he responds when his own country's hate is held up to the spotlight.