Rob
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And they're not living in South Africa. So there's been a mass exodus of people. And the black population is obviously having more babies than the white population. And of the 60 million population, I'd say about 8 million are illegal immigrants. Where from? Zambia, Zimbabwe, Congo, Malawi. 8 million of 60 million. 60 million. Illegal.
So I was on a plane flying over to D.C. yesterday with a South African, must have been 40 years old, and he said he'd left the country because he thought he'd sold his cosmetics business, but the deal never went through.
So I was on a plane flying over to D.C. yesterday with a South African, must have been 40 years old, and he said he'd left the country because he thought he'd sold his cosmetics business, but the deal never went through.
So he said to go back to South Africa, re-engage to try and keep building his business under terrible circumstances or try and sell it, which he can't do because no one's buying anything. So a lot of South Africans can't leave. They're not wealthy enough, they don't have the opportunity, and they don't have another passport.
So he said to go back to South Africa, re-engage to try and keep building his business under terrible circumstances or try and sell it, which he can't do because no one's buying anything. So a lot of South Africans can't leave. They're not wealthy enough, they don't have the opportunity, and they don't have another passport.
What's the percentage? Okay, so these numbers have been thrown around by the left. of the arable land in South Africa, if you take the total land area, it's higher than 50%. But the Western and Northern Cape is mostly desert. So you have massive land holdings. But if you look at arable land, 20% is owned by white farmers.
What's the percentage? Okay, so these numbers have been thrown around by the left. of the arable land in South Africa, if you take the total land area, it's higher than 50%. But the Western and Northern Cape is mostly desert. So you have massive land holdings. But if you look at arable land, 20% is owned by white farmers.
Non-whites. Non-whites, whatever it could be. Yeah, mostly black farmers. But the government, when they bought the land or it was transferred to the black owners, the government has not given most of them the title deeds. If that isn't communism in motion, subtle, evil, malevolent communism.
Non-whites. Non-whites, whatever it could be. Yeah, mostly black farmers. But the government, when they bought the land or it was transferred to the black owners, the government has not given most of them the title deeds. If that isn't communism in motion, subtle, evil, malevolent communism.
ISIL, the government had the title deed.
ISIL, the government had the title deed.
Okay. I checked when I came in here. So Mayflower, 1620. The first settlers, Dutch settlers in the Cape, 1650. When they got to the Cape, there were no black tribes, none in the Western Cape, all the way up to this place called the Fish River, 600 kilometers away. The black tribes had migrated down over a thousand years from Eastern Africa into South Africa. So they're settlers too.
Okay. I checked when I came in here. So Mayflower, 1620. The first settlers, Dutch settlers in the Cape, 1650. When they got to the Cape, there were no black tribes, none in the Western Cape, all the way up to this place called the Fish River, 600 kilometers away. The black tribes had migrated down over a thousand years from Eastern Africa into South Africa. So they're settlers too.
If they call us settlers, they're settlers. And they met. And there was peace, working together, and fighting. The usual story. Fast forward. The British then arrive in 1820. And then the late 1800s, gold is discovered. And everyone piles in. And then the British have their first, sorry, they have the Zulu Wars. Then we've been fighting all our career.
If they call us settlers, they're settlers. And they met. And there was peace, working together, and fighting. The usual story. Fast forward. The British then arrive in 1820. And then the late 1800s, gold is discovered. And everyone piles in. And then the British have their first, sorry, they have the Zulu Wars. Then we've been fighting all our career.
Then they have the first Boer War, English Afrikaner. And then the second Boer War, English Afrikaner. And in 1910, South Africa, which was made up of a whole lot of different republics and provinces, was formed into this Union of South Africa. So South Africa as a country is only 114 years old. It's new. But it's big. It's twice the size of France. a very big country.
Then they have the first Boer War, English Afrikaner. And then the second Boer War, English Afrikaner. And in 1910, South Africa, which was made up of a whole lot of different republics and provinces, was formed into this Union of South Africa. So South Africa as a country is only 114 years old. It's new. But it's big. It's twice the size of France. a very big country.
And the Western Cape has nothing in common with KwaZulu-Natal, has nothing in common with the North, the Pumalanga. They're 26 different languages. The white tribe is made up of the Afrikaners of Dutch and German origin, but they really are white Africans. And the Anglos, like myself, are some more English heritage. So they're two different white tribes.
And the Western Cape has nothing in common with KwaZulu-Natal, has nothing in common with the North, the Pumalanga. They're 26 different languages. The white tribe is made up of the Afrikaners of Dutch and German origin, but they really are white Africans. And the Anglos, like myself, are some more English heritage. So they're two different white tribes.
Then there's the coloreds who are a mix of white and black. the Indians, Indian South Africans, and then the blacks. And the black population of South Africa, I think they're 20-something tribes, Zulu, Xhosa, Sutu, Venda, Suwane, all in different areas. It's a patchwork of individual communities. And therein lies the solution. I'll get to it quickly. We have to decentralize.