All Episodes
June 20, 2021 - Radio Renaissance - Jared Taylor
09:19
Have Afrikaners Reached the Breaking Point?
| Copy link to current segment

Time Text
Hello, I'm Jared Taylor with American Renaissance.
Brendan Horner was the manager of a farm just outside a small town called Paul Rue in the Free State Province of South Africa.
On October 1st, he found several men who were probably trying to steal sheep.
They overpowered him, tied him to a fence post, clubbed him, stabbed him, and finally strangled him to death.
The flowers marked the spot where he died.
And that is the fence post to which he was tied.
Here is a photo of Horner along with two men arrested for his murder.
One had 16 arrests and 9 convictions for stock theft.
This is Horner in a field of sunflowers with his girlfriend.
She and his father found the body.
Ever since black rule, there have been attacks on white farmers.
The Transvaal Agricultural Union reports that in the first half of this year, there were 141 attacks and 26 murders.
This headline from The Sun is from just this month, October 5th.
Female farmers sexually assaulted, tortured, and murdered in latest horrific attacks on South Africa's white farm workers.
44-year-old Chantelle Kershaw was the latest victim.
Often blacks torture whites in the cruelest ways, and sometimes the murderers steal almost nothing.
Do white people ever behave this way?
Can you show me even one case of a gang of whites who attacked a black couple, tortured them, made the man watch while they raped his wife, and then killed them?
You can't.
It doesn't happen.
There is an abiding hatred among many South African blacks who want to kill all whites.
Julius Malema is the leader of the third largest political party in South Africa, the Economic Freedom Fighters.
He promises to take land from whites and likes to sing a song in the Zulu language with the chorus,"Kill the farmer, kill the boor." The ruling African National Congress defends the"kill the boor" song and says it's not hate speech.
The Brendan Horner murder may be something approaching the last straw.
On October 5th, several thousand whites gathered for a demonstration at the town of Senegal, where the men accused of the murder were being held.
Many of the whites had driven all night to get there.
There were prayers outside the courthouse, along with signs that said"Boer Lives Matter" and"Stop the Farm Killings." But there was something else.
Something very unusual.
White people rioted.
A group of them forced their way into the courthouse building, apparently intent on taking justice into their own hands.
They didn't get into the cells where the men were being held, but they overturned a police van, and then they burned it.
Dan Root, a 12th generation South African and founder of the Pro-Afrikaans Action Group, explains why this is important.
Now, the burning of police vehicles and that sort of thing by black protesters in this country is almost a daily occurrence.
There's so much anarchy and disorder in this country that it's nothing to write home about if something gets burned down or a vehicle gets burned down.
But for white people to go over to that kind of action is something completely new and it's indicative of an underlying anger.
That's simply boiling over.
And that has been the consensus now that anger is boiling over and that we are going to have to ready ourselves for a new situation in South Africa.
Mr. Root notes that when Andre Pienaar, one of the leaders of the Senecal demonstration, was arrested, Afrikaner lawyers rushed to defend him at no charge.
This is part of a broad sense of unity and a new quality of Afrikaner anger.
But at the moment, then, we are angry.
You know, there's a real anger amongst especially the Afrikaner people or the Boer people in this country, and it's everyone.
It's the farmers, it's the people in the cities, they're on WhatsApp groups, and they are communicating, and they are saying, we can't take this anymore, and we have to do something about it.
Whites are only 9% of the population of South Africa.
They are a minority in a hostile country.
And this is the prospect whites face all around the world as their numbers decline.
Afrikaners are on the front line.
And depending on whether we die or not, it could say something about the rest of the Western world.
There's a real hatred by these people around us, for us.
They take over our society, and the more they fail in maintaining standards, in maintaining institutions, and even the economy, the more they resent us.
Is there no way out?
Mr Root believes that Afrikaners are regaining the spirit of resistance of their courageous ancestors.
And even Brendan Horner was killed.
They say that his knuckles were completely broken and...
You know, worn down from fighting back against about five attackers.
So we do fight back and it's this spirit of resistance that we've still got in us that is so valuable and that is going to become more and more evident as we go forward in this current time of crisis in South Africa.
For we are engaged in a life and death struggle.
The rest of the Western world will soon be, as the demographics change, as more and more third world people come to Europe and to North America, eventually you will find yourselves in the same situation as we are in.
Tensions are rising on both sides.
Julius Malema, whom we met earlier, was on television to explain that he was going to take his men to another demonstration planned for the town of Senegal.
This is our country.
We too belong here.
And if going to Senegal will cause a civil war, if a man exercises his constitutional rights, that will lead to a civil war.
So be it.
I hope there will be no civil war.
I hope there can be a peaceful solution that gives all races in South Africa a way to pursue their destinies apart from each other.
There is already a small beginning that shows how this works.
The all-white settlement of Orania, where close to 2,000 Afrikaners lead an ideal, bucolic life.
There is a huge waiting list of people who want to live there.
Isn't it obvious that the solution is disengagement, some form of separation?
And not just in South Africa, but in the United States.
Does anybody think this is the happy ending, or even a promising beginning?
This is Minneapolis, just this year.
And you get strangely similar pictures in France, where North Africans riot.
And isn't it odd to find exactly the same thing in Britain?
In Sweden, this is what happened when non-whites didn't get their way.
And this was a lighthearted celebration of immigrant rights on the Turkish border with Greece.
It's not hard to understand.
Multiracialism doesn't work.
People need countries of their own, especially white people who are a small minority in the world's population and who have already taken in far more strangers than the rest of the world combined.
It's time we realized that this multi-culti experiment has failed everywhere.
The longer we refuse to recognize the obvious, The longer we keep trying to do the impossible, the harder it will be to find a peaceful solution.
As Dan Root says, the rest of the world must pay attention to what is happening in South Africa, where the families of victims put up crosses in memory of the Plas Morda, of the torture and murder of white farmers.
Brendan Horner will not rest in peace until his people Not just the Afrikaner people, but white people everywhere can live in peace in communities, regions, and nations that will always be theirs.
Export Selection