Important Notice: If you do not plan to go over as refugee to the USA, it is now time to prepare for the worst. Plan in anycase. Even if you are an aspiring refugee. Some of us might not make it in time. There is no longer a question IF civil war will break out. It will. And before 2028, maybe still in this year. It is already brewing in KZN and will spill over to other towns. Illegal foreigners will not be the only target - it will be an excuse to exterminate Whites and Indians and coloreds too, openly. It will become like IRAN, maybe even more brutal.
Johannesburg, 25 April 2026 – South Africa is sliding toward a constitutional crisis that could ignite open civil conflict. The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), uMkhonto weSizwe Party (MKP), and powerful factions inside the ANC are openly campaigning to gut key protections in the 1996 Constitution — especially Section 235 on self-determination, along with Sections 9 (equality), 18 (freedom of association), 21 (freedom of movement), and 25 (property rights).
This is not abstract politics. It is the next phase of what many are now calling “Blartheid” — a newly coined term for the systemic Black-on-White discrimination under the ANC government. With 142 anti-White laws still on the statute books — more than during apartheid — South Africa has earned the grim distinction of being the world’s most racially discriminatory nation today.
“Blartheid” (Black-Apart-Hate) has replaced the softer label of “Reverse Apartheid.” It is visible in race-based legislation, cadre deployment, and inflammatory rhetoric. Julius Malema’s EFF continues to sing “Kill the Boer, Kill the Farmer” at rallies — a chant that the Constitutional Court has effectively protected as political speech, despite widespread outrage and ongoing legal challenges. Critics call it a “BSS: Blartheid Slogan Song” steeped in hatred.
This ruling stands in contrast to a more recent High Court decision that found Malema guilty of hate speech for other inflammatory remarks, highlighting the inconsistent and highly contested legal landscape around incitement in South Africa.
Genocide Watch: South Africa Between Stages 6 and 7
According to Genocide Watch, genocide is not a single event but a progressive process across ten stages. South Africa, particularly regarding White Afrikaners (especially farmers), currently sits between Stage 6 (Polarization) and Stage 7 (Preparation), with elements of persecution already evident.
The stages include:
- Classification
- Symbolization
- Discrimination
- Dehumanization
- Organization
- Polarization
- Preparation
- Persecution
- Extermination
- Denial
Farm murders — making agriculture the most dangerous profession in the country — represent a brutal reality on this spectrum. Urban murders are also surging, showing that farm attacks are no longer the only target. President Cyril Ramaphosa, often called “Slippery Cyril,” continues to deny the scale of the crisis, despite his government’s own policies enabling it. Critics describe him as an ideological puppet advancing agendas that erode minority rights while the country burns.
Constitutional Sabotage as the Final Blow
Removing or weakening the remaining constitutional guardrails would supercharge Blartheid. As one concerned citizen noted in reaction to Willem Petzer’s latest video: “They want to change section 235… but more than section 235 is important,” listing equality, association, movement, and property rights as equally vital.
Public sentiment is turning raw:
- “If they remove Article 235 we are forced into a civil war,” warned one commenter.
- “Separate development is the only solution for South Africa,” stated another.
- “They are really destroying South Africa.”
Many accuse the Democratic Alliance of complicit silence, focused more on parliamentary salaries than defending minority rights.
No Group Is Safe
History shows that once one target group is neutralised, the cycle does not stop. Coloured and Indian communities are being warned not to rest easy — they too could find themselves in the crosshairs as “Blartheid” expands.
The rainbow nation experiment, hailed globally as a miracle, is collapsing. What remains is a fragile document on borrowed time. University of Chicago research shows African constitutions last an average of just 12 years. South Africa’s 32-year-old version is already living on borrowed time.
The Precipice
As radical parties push to rewrite the rules, South Africa stands at a dangerous crossroads. Weakening property rights, equality provisions, and self-determination clauses will accelerate capital flight, deepen the skills exodus, and inflame ethnic divisions that are already boiling.
The denial of targeted violence against White farmers may comfort some in power, but it does not change the facts on the ground. Evil, once unleashed through state-sanctioned discrimination and dehumanisation, rarely stops at one group.
South Africa is staring into the abyss. The removal of these constitutional sections may not just mark the death of the 1996 settlement — it could light the fuse for something far darker.
May cooler heads prevail. May Christ have mercy on this land. But the warning signs are unmistakable: civil war is on the cards if this constitutional destruction is allowed to proceed.
The time for polite denial is over.
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