Anti-White genocide in South Africa escalates

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Debp

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I was reading the comments alongside the video. South Africans and others living there are confirming this.
 

Scott Downey

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I know, what has been happening is bad, and it's been happening for years.
Africa is totally fractured into these little fiefdoms run by bad governments that kill all sorts of different kinds of people, not just in South Africa.
 

Debp

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I asked a member on another forum who lives in South Africa to comment. He says the video is correct...the fault of that ANC party in South Africa.
 
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Debp

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President Trump's administration has allowed 59 South African refugees into our country. Guess who is complaining about that? The liberals.

 

Scott Downey

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Check this out, Episcopal church is angry Trump opened the door for them.

As is the ANC, they want equity and justice, not looking for peace. Want accountability for past history

Glad I am not Episcopalian. I mean it's not the only thing about them.



Ruling South African Party Furious After White Refugees Escape to US; Want 'Accountability for Historic Privilege'

Ruling South African Party Furious After White Refugees Escape to US; Want 'Accountability for Historic Privilege'© Saul Loeb - AFP / Getty Images
The Episcopal Church rejected the Trump administration's request for assistance, saying it would not help the 59 South African refugees that arrived in the U.S. on Monday.

The church's presiding bishop, Sean Rowe, took it a step further and said the Episcopal Migration Ministries would be terminating its 40-year-old partnership with the U.S. government, according to a statement from the church published Monday.


"In light of our church’s steadfast commitment to racial justice and reconciliation and our historic ties with the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, we are not able to take this step," Rowe's statement read.

"Accordingly, we have determined that, by the end of the federal fiscal year, we will conclude our refugee resettlement grant agreements with the U.S. federal government," Rowe said.

In January, President Donald Trump signed an executive order largely suspending the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program, a program the church participated in, to control the immigration crisis created by the Biden administration.

"Then, just over two weeks ago, the federal government informed Episcopal Migration Ministries that under the terms of our federal grant, we are expected to resettle white Afrikaners from South Africa whom the U.S. government has classified as refugees," Rowe said in his Monday statement.