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The room fell into a heavy silence as the President continued to roll disturbing footage of rallies filled with chants of “shoot! kill!” Echoes of hate and racial vengeance filled the screen.
One particularly haunting clip included aerial shots of a lonely road lined with countless white crosses — each representing a slain white farmer. Trump paused to explain, “Each one of those white things you see is a cross, and there’s approximately a thousand of them. They’re all white farmers. The family of white farmers.”
He continued, pointing to a long line of parked vehicles: “Those people aren’t driving. They’re stopped there to pay respects to a family member who was killed. It’s a terrible sight. I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Before Trump played the footage, Ramaphosa had attempted to steer the conversation into safer diplomatic territory, expressing hope that the U.S. president would remain open to all perspectives. He told Trump, “Listen to the voices of South Africans” and reassured him that “no white genocide is happening here.”
But Trump wasn’t swayed.
“We have thousands of stories talking about it, and we have documentaries, we have news stories,” Trump said firmly, rejecting the idea that the violence was being exaggerated. Billionaire Elon Musk, himself a South African native and vocal critic of the country’s current direction, was reportedly in attendance during the exchange.
WATCH:
The issue of South Africa’s farm violence has stirred fierce debates not just overseas, but right here in Washington. On Tuesday, Secretary of State Marco Rubio defended the administration’s move to offer refugee status to fleeing white South African farmers during a tense Senate hearing.
Democrat Senator Tim Kaine accused the administration of racial bias, claiming they were only helping the farmers “because of the color of their skin.”
Rubio wasn’t having it. “I didn’t say that, you did,” he shot back, standing firm in defense of the policy.
While the Biden administration and the media continue to focus on mass immigration policies and border chaos, the plight of white South African farmers has been largely ignored by the left. Trump’s move to spotlight their suffering — in front of the international press and the South African president himself — is a bold counter-narrative to the progressive mantra that only certain groups deserve protection.
Despite fierce criticism, Trump isn’t backing down. His actions prove that, once again, he’s willing to confront uncomfortable truths head-on — even when the global elite and left-wing media would rather turn a blind eye.
This moment will be remembered not just as a confrontation, but as a statement: evil thrives in silence — and Trump won’t be silent.



