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With acquiescence and even aid from the West, South Africa is in a death spiral, as its elected communist leaders incite genocide and uprisings to bring about total control.
Along a highway on a grassy hill, thousands of white crosses - each one representing an individual victim of brutal farm murders, or plaasmoorde in Afrikaans - are a stark reminder of the reality facing Europeandescent farmers in the new South Africa. One of the iron crosses was planted last year in memory of two-year-old Willemien Potgieter, who was executed on a farm and left in a pool of her own blood. Her parents were murdered, too - the father hacked to death with a machete. Before leaving, the half-dozen killers tied a note to the gate: "We killed them. We're coming back."
The Potgieter family massacre is just one of the tens of thousands of farm attacks to have plagued South Africa since 1994. Like little Willemien's cross, many of those now-iconic emblems represent innocent children, even babies, who have been savagely murdered, oftentimes after being tortured in ways so gruesome, horrifying, and barbaric, that mere words could never adequately describe it. The death toll is still rising.
Like countless South Africans, Andre Vandenberg has lost multiple relatives to violence in the so-called "Rainbow Nation." In separate incidents, according to Vandenberg, a motorcycle exporter and former military man who now lives in the United States, two of his female cousins were brutally and repeatedly raped in front of their husbands. One of the women was pregnant with the couple's first child. All five victims were murdered. After sodomizing and killing the husbands, in both cases, the ruthless attackers raped Vandenberg's cousins again.
Enduring the horror for hours, one of the women was eventually shot. The other had a tire filled with gasoline put around her neck and set ablaze - the agonizing punishment known as "necklacing," which was once commonly meted out to black opponents of the predominantly black African National Congress (ANC), which now rules South Africa in an unholy alliance with the South African Communist Party (SACP) and an umbrella group for labor unions. Nelson Mandela's wife, Winnie, was known for publicly supporting the barbaric act. Nobody was ever arrested in connection...