Sunday, December 21, 2008

Geloftedag 2008


Boer activists Dr. Lets Pretorius and Henry Pinkham commemorate Geloftedag, or The Day of the Vow, with an interesting recount of the battles surrounding the sacred holy day, including The Battle of Blood River.

Dr. Lets and Henry also talk about the situation in Southern Africa, including the new political party COPE, and Marxist Dictator Robert Mugabe, from the Boer perspective.

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Saturday, December 13, 2008

Zim Crisis: Eric Harris Reports


World leaders from US President George W. Bush to former UN general secretary Kofi Annan, and African leaders including Kenyan PM Raila Odinga and Archbishop Desmond Tutu have called for Marxist dictator Robert Mugabe to step down from power in Zimbabwe, aka Communist Occupied Rhodesia.

Live and direct from behind enemy lines, author Eric Harris speaks about his first-hand accounts of the harrowing conditions wrecking havoc his country, and what Marxist Dictator Robert Mugabe is doing to make them worse.

Eric's website, which gives updates on what is going on in Zimbabwe, is Jambanja.net.

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Saturday, October 11, 2008

ANCYL Military Camp Exposed

Freedom Front Plus representative Leslie Voorster speaks about the historical split of South Africa's ruling ANC Party, and its implications for the country's political landscape, as well as Afrikaaner and Boervolk.

Mnr. Voorster also speaks about the discovery of a military training camp in the veldt, and the arrest of more than 200 ANC Youth League members who were training there.

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Sunday, September 7, 2008

Peter Stiff Interview


Author Peter Stiff talks about his book, The Silent War, which gives insight into South African military operations during the apartheid years. Mr. Stiff discusses top secret raids by Special Forces into surrounding African states, the political dynamics which led to them, the turbulent history of the times, and why South Africa naievly thought it could negotiate its support for Rhodesia for peace.

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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

Jacqui Thomson Interview

Author Jacqui Thomson talks about her book, An Unpopular War, which documents the lives of South Africans conscripted into national service during the 1970's and 80's, and their service during the Angolan War.

An Unpopular War has sold more than 60,000 copies in South Africa and has been nominated for the Bookseller Award, a prestigious nomination by booksellers honoring the books that trade feel have performed the best this year.

An Afrikaans version, Dit Was Oorlog, has also been released.

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Saturday, July 26, 2008

Expropriation Bill on Hold... for Now...


The Communist-ANC’s dreaded Expropriation Bill, which would allow for the Bantu Regime to conduct an all-out land grab of property, including white farms, has garnered an usual coalition of opposition, ranging from the liberal-leaning Democratic Alliance, to the conservative Freedom Front Plus, as well as interests such as the Boervolk and the African Christian Democratic Party.

Last week’s savage beating of white farmers Mike & Angela Cambell & Ben Freeth, who have been waging their own legal battle in Communist Occupied Rhodesia against Mugabe's attempt to expropriate their farms, brought a clear and vivid picture of what may very well be in store for white farmers in South Africa, should the Expropriation Bill become law and given the silent Boer Genocide currently under way there.

This week, news broke of the Expropriation Bill being set aside... for now. How long will this detante last? How true a victory is this? Dr. Chris Van Zeal, Property Rights Manager, TAU SA, explains this and more.

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Saturday, July 12, 2008

Apology To The Boervolk


One by one, Western Countries around the world have given apologies for what their ancestors did to so-called "indigenous" populations, Canada and Australia most notedly. One man, John Harding, looks to set the record straight on what his British ancestors did to the indigenous Boer population of the Transvaal and Orange Freestate during the Second Boer War, more than 100 years ago.

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