
South Africa's "Struggle Song" or Thinly Veiled Call for Violence?
A catchy little tune about killing white farmers is stirring up controversy—who could have seen that coming?
Sane Perspective
"Singing About Murder is Just Culture"—Says the Left
Ah yes, nothing screams "peace and unity" quite like a song that literally calls for the killing of an ethnic group. The leftist media wants you to believe this is just a harmless "struggle chant," a quaint relic of the past, and definitely not a violent rallying cry in a country where white farmers are actually being murdered at alarming rates. Meanwhile, Julius Malema and his radical Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party continue to sing "Shoot the Boer" while pushing for land expropriation—without compensation, of course. But don't worry, the song isn’t really about killing farmers, just like "redistribution" isn't really about stealing. And if you even mention the rising violence against white South Africans, you're a conspiracy theorist! The media assures us there's "no evidence" of white genocide—because if you redefine terms and ignore inconvenient statistics, the problem magically disappears. This isn't about justice; it's Marxist revenge politics, and it's dangerous. But sure, let's keep pretending that chanting about slaughtering a minority population is just an innocent "cultural expression." Nothing New.