Magats_Love_NHB
Let It Burn!

We Can No Longer Dismiss Trump’s Blatant Racism
The meeting with Ramaphosa marked a reversion to the open racism of U.S. presidents long past.


My FP: Follow topics and authors to get straight to what you like. Exclusively for FP subscribers. Subscribe Now | Log In
May 23, 2025, 2:37 PM View Comments (3)
For weeks now, egged on by his South African-born mega-billionaire advisor Elon Musk, U.S. President Donald Trump has been ratcheting up a campaign to inflict damage on South Africa, a country already beset with grave economic, racial, and historic problems.
Trump’s Second Term
Ongoing reports and analysis
Even before his inauguration, Trump threatened South Africa and other members of the BRICS international grouping with 100 percent tariffs if they pursued the creation of a new currency that would serve as an alternative to the dollar. (South Africa denied any such plans.)
Then, in one of its early moves, the Trump administration cut off aid to Pretoria in February on the pretext that it was committing “massive human rights violations” against members of its white minority population. This came in direct response to South Africa’s new land law, which allows the government to expropriate property in limited circumstances to address apartheid-era land inequality. No land has been seized under the law.
The following month, the U.S. State Department declared South Africa’s ambassador to the United States persona non grata and expelled him on short notice, accusing him of being a “race-baiting politician” who hates Trump.
But this was mere prelude to Trump’s outrageous treatment of South African President Cyril Ramaphosa at the White House on Wednesday, which was reminiscent of Trump’s confrontation in February with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. In the elaborate setup that unfolded, Trump dimmed the lights of the Oval Office to project footage purporting to show mass graves of white farmers in South Africa who, he claimed, were victims of an ongoing genocide.
This was false. The press quickly debunked the supposed evidence that Trump offered, from inaccurate footage of a burial site to a photo that was not, in fact, from South Africa, but rather the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
For his part, Ramaphosa gently rebutted Trump and brought prominent Afrikaners, the descendants of mostly Dutch migrants, to lend their testimonials in rejection of the genocide claims and plea for better relations with Washington. They spoke about South Africa’s crime problem—it has one of the world’s highest murder rates—and asked Washington for help.
Trump, who admitted no error, was not chastened and made no offers of assistance. His unacceptable behavior at the meeting can only be described as racist.
A quick look back helps explain how South Africa got to its present situation. Long past are the optimistic days that followed the end of apartheid, a system of formal white supremacist rule, in 1994. Apartheid formally endured for 46 years, but it was preceded by a far longer period of white domination over both Indigenous groups and an economy that produced enormous wealth through gold and diamond mining and other forms of extraction.
In what much of the world applauded as a kind of miracle, South Africa emerged from apartheid under the wise and generous leadership of Nelson Mandela. He had spent 27 years of a life sentence in prison—nearly six of them in solitary confinement—for his opposition to South Africa’s legally enforced racial separatism and inequality. Despite the many cruelties imposed on him, his family, and those he had struggled with to achieve justice, Mandela governed as an advocate of national unification across racial lines.
Unfortunately, what ensued was not quite miraculous. Mandela’s deep humanity, soft touch, and warmth were not enough to solve South Africa’s problems. He had shortcomings as a leader, too, with no effective strategy for boosting the economic development of a country that was the richest in Africa but among the most unequal in the world.
Read More
