Video of South African politician Julius Malema leading a stadium of nearly 100,000 supporters in a genocidal chant went viral last week, shocking many Americans. Malema led the crowd as they sang a song with the lyrics “Shoot to kill, kill the Boer, kill the farmer,” a reference to the white Afrikaner population of South Africa.
In any other circumstance, the horrific call to violence would have generated an international outcry, but Malema chose the right target. Instead of issuing an unconditional condemnation of this dangerous rhetoric, progressive media outlets like the New York Times ran cover for Malema and his Marxist-Leninist party, the Economic Freedom Fighters, as they chanted their demand for racial violence. Say what you want about the American left, they recognize an ideological ally when they see one.
American media are always scouring the country for stories of bigotry against minorities in the hopes of amplifying their divisive racial narrative. In the United States, popular opinion grants political authority, and progressives seek to generate hegemonic control over the popular consciousness by keeping the population in a constant state of woke paranoia. The Democratic voting base must be kept in a perpetual state of fear, believing that an underground network of neo-Nazis and Klan members could surge back into political power at any moment, visiting a reign of terror on all the vulnerable groups that the left pretends to champion. Republican voters must be kept in a state of constant apprehension, painfully aware that one stray look or unguarded comment at work or school could destroy the rest of their lives as the media search for the newest villain to parade before the public during their two minutes of hate.
The relentless nature of this witch hunt means that journalists have an increasingly difficult time finding any suitable villains, but the progressive media never declare victory and end the revolution. Instead they fabricate increasingly outlandish conspiracy theories to perpetuate the woke jihad. In the last few years, working out, drinking milk, and using the “OK” hand gesture have all been declared the coded dog whistles of white supremacy.
In a media climate where one’s choice of breakfast beverage may reveal secret racial animus, surely the press would jump at the chance to decry an open declaration of hatred and violence chanted by a political leader and a stadium full of his militant supporters. But of course, anyone who has been paying attention knows that progressive leftists have no problem with racial hatred, in fact they encourage it at every opportunity. For the progressive journalist, the morality of any interaction is dictated entirely by the melanin content of the groups in question. One group is the oppressor and everything they do is evil; the other group is oppressed and everything they do is justified.
The murder of white farmers in South Africa is a very real phenomenon, but those who dare to notice it are often smeared as racist conspiracy theorists by progressive media. In the last week of July, nine farm attacks and two murders were committed, according to the South African civil rights organization AfriForum. After the direct call to violence by Malema and his political party, a number of residents were attacked on their farms, including 79-year-old Theo Bekker, who was brutally beaten before having his throat cut. A few days later, farmer Duwayne Smith and his wife, Ingrid, were shot by gunmen in front of their two young children. Duwayne was killed, and Ingrid is still recovering from her injuries in a local hospital. In many cases nothing of value is taken during farm murders, indicating that these are not just robberies gone bad but targeted acts of violence.
Despite the fatal consequences of Malema’s rally, the New York Times decided to defend the use of the murderous chant. Journalists at the paper became furious after South African-born billionaire Elon Musk stated the obvious: that these chants were calls for genocide targeting white people. The Times ran a piece characterizing Musk’s concern as opportunistic and inflammatory. The author claimed, “Despite the words, the song should not be taken as a literal call to violence, according to Mr. Malema and veterans and historians of the anti-apartheid struggle. It has been around for decades, one of many battle cries of the anti-apartheid movement that remain a defining feature of the country’s political culture.” To the progressive journalist, drinking milk and working out are dangerous signals of racial hatred, but a song openly calling for genocide is simply a quaint little ditty that should not be taken too seriously.
Hence the much needed 'security' aspect of ANY serious parallel system. Just ask Afriforum.
But Auron,
IDGAF about minorities in other places. Now this is Substack so I'll try to keep it polite.
How can we argue for the, umm, cleaning up of our own living places in Europe, and for freedom of expression, if we get triggered by some Zulu or w/e war chants and blacks wanting the whites from SA, where they do not belong, to be expelled?
Europe should take all these people back, and we should send to SA all the mass migrated biomass on our shores.
Let's be consistent, shall we