Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. Hey, it's Patrick.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
CARELCI and I'm Adrianna Cortez and welcome to Red Pilled
America's fam Boogie.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
I hope you guys week is going well. You are
listening to your favorite co hosts of Red Pilled America's
audio storytelling show. But now we are doing fam Boogey.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
So wait, you are the favorite I.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Said our favorite hosts. Didn't you hear me say that.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
You said your favorite co host?
Speaker 1 (00:48):
I thought, I said hosts.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
See, I can say, guys, let's take a poll. We're
just kidding. You are my favorite people.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
What people don't know about you is that you can't
say at the end of a word. You can't plurals
that off and you could do it with some words,
but you can't do it with all words. Yeah, you're right,
so but I can and I think I said.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Oh, you can't say citizenship.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
I cannot say citizenship, and that is you know. I
did a search. Yeah, when we were when we did
this episode of these episodes, I did a search for citizenship.
I see, I still can't say citizenship, And there was
like eighty times or something that we said it in
one of the episodes, so I'm like just fumbling up.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Oh my gosh, you guys have no ideas how many
times it took him to record this last narrative. But
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That's how. That's how everything is. You need to support
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Speaker 3 (02:21):
That's true.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
So we're gonna get into a bunch of stuff here
once again. This is RPA's fam Boogie. We try to
do this every week, talk about things that are happening
in culture, and it's just kind of a little bit
of a break between producing our audio documentary series. Our
part five is coming out really soon What's an American?
If you have not checked those out yet, go check
them out. It's worth it. I think it's one of
(02:43):
the most important series we've ever done.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
But now others are doing series almost exactly like it.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
Yeah, there's some other people that are doing some stuff.
Speaker 3 (02:51):
Yes, they will remain nameless.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Yeah, we'll do that. So we we're gonna be today.
We're gonna be talking about South Africa or the South
Africa argument between Trump and the President of South Africa,
which is really good, and I want to get into
a little bit about the even what the whole thing
is about, which has to do with white African farmers.
We're going to also talk about the heartbreaking news with
Scott Adams. We're going to get into that horrible terrorist
(03:13):
attack in Washington, d c. Against a couple that I
believe was leaving a Jewish museum event. Get into a
little bit of that and some other things as well too.
Trump going against Harvard, I think is kind of an
interesting interesting topic, but let's start off with this South
African I guess confrontation is what you can best call
(03:35):
it in the White House. I don't think a lot
of people have really gotten into the background of what happened.
I'm sure you guys have all seen the videos of
Donald Trump. He had in the South African President into
the Oval Office, very similar to how he had Zelenski
in from.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
Ukraine and in Remapostas how you say that it might.
Speaker 1 (03:59):
Be something like that, but I'm just going to say
South African President as much.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
We're probably going to mispronounce it Ramaposa.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Ramaphosa. So he has him in the Oval Office and
he confronts him over some activity that's been happening in
South Africa for quite some time. So basically, over you know,
the last couple of decades, there has been this movement
of South Africans displacing white farmers in South Africa, and
(04:31):
there is vast documented stories of deaths, murders, even in
some stories of people being boiled to death in front
of family members. That kind of a thing, very horrific,
horrific stuff. And it goes back, of course to kind
of the conflict that happened there in the sixties and
seventies and eighties in regards to apartheid, and people think
(04:52):
that the South Africans. Haven't you know that they're just
all they are as colonizers. The whites that are in
South Africa have been there for four hundred years, almost
four hundred years. They have been there for a very
very long time. You know. If you can't call them
natives now, I don't know what you call them after
four hundred years. But this movement has become very bold,
and there's been several people that have done documentaries on this,
(05:15):
including Katie Hopkins, very popular UK conservative. She did a
documentary called and I'm going to screw this name up,
but it's called plas Moored the Killing Fields. I believe
Plasmore it is this place that a lot of the
white farmers were killed. And Laurence Southern has also done
a documentary called Farmlands, and it's on this predicament for
(05:37):
these white farmers out there. So this whole kind of
thing started when and I was wrong, I think last
week when we talked about this subject. Maybe it was
the week before. I thought it was fifty thousand farmers
that we were letting in because I kept seeing that
the people say fifty fifty to fifty, like fifty farmers,
and I'm thinking fifty thousand because I'm looking at the
legacy media's reaction to this, and they're like going, you know,
(06:02):
bonkers over all of these farmers coming in, and I'm thinking, Okay,
when I saw fifty, I'm thinking fifty thousand.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
I also thought the number was much much bigger. I
did not realize it was literally five zero fifty. You
have fifty nine, fifty nine people.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
Fifty nine farmers. Okay.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
The left is going bizid over this, but they're okay
with open borders.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
They're okay with millions of Latinos coming in, with tens
of thousands Haitians coming in, with tens of thousands, hundreds
of thousands of Samalies coming in and being placed in
all these areas. Fifty nine white South African farmers and
the media is going bombed.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
That's where they draw the line.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
Yes, exactly. But so President Trump allows these fifty nine
farmers to come in on refugee status, and the South
African President Ramafosa spoke at some conference. He talked about
this issue, and I think this is what got Trump
(07:02):
kind of to confront him in the White House.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
Those people who are being enticed to go to the
United States do not fit the definition of a refugee.
A refugee someone who has to leave their country out
of fear of political persecution, religious persecution, or economic persecution.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
And that's what the United States says they're undergoing in
South Africa. That's why they opened the door for them.
Speaker 4 (07:31):
Yes, and they don't fit that bill. They don't fit
that description. And I had a conversation with President Trump
on the phone and I he asked, he said, what's
happening down there? And I said, President, what you have
been told by those people who are opposed to transformation
(07:52):
back home in South Africa is not true. And I
added to him, I said, we were well taught by
Nelson Mandela and either chonic leaders like Oliver Tambo on
how to continue to build an united nation out of
the diverse groupings that we have in South Africa with
(08:16):
the only country on the continent where the colonizers came
to stay and we have never driven them out of
our country. It's a fringe grouping that is anti transformation
and anti change that would actually prefer to see South
Africa going back to aparty a type of policies. And
(08:40):
I said to him, I would never do that. I
learned at the feet of Nelson Mandela, and we intend
to proceed with the implementation of our constitutional architecture. And
I thought in my conversation with him early in the
morning at four o'clock South African time, he understood that
(09:02):
I said, I'd like to come and meet him so
that we can discuss this matter further.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
Okay, So you hear some keywords there that he's using.
He uses the word colonizer, and he's talking about these
people being colonizers. Now, now, like I said earlier, the
whites that have been in South Africa, they've been here
there for four hundred years. Okay, almost four hundred years.
It was the early sixteen hundreds when they landed in
that area. So this man is completely gaslighting on the issue.
(09:34):
And there's a reason why I want to talk about
this because you know, we're America First show, where America
First people people think, O, why are we talking about
the South African area. There's a reason why it directly
impacts the United States and you should be paying attention
to this for very very specific reason. We're going to
get into that later in this segment. So this man
is gas lighting the world. He goes to this Africa
(09:57):
CEO forum and says that he has a conversation with Trump.
Trump gives him some information. He tails Trump, You've been misinformed.
He does it in front of the entire world. They're
looking for investment in their country. And so he says,
I want to come and talk to you, mister Trump.
So mister Trump invites him into the into the Oval
(10:17):
Office and he calls him out on this issue. And
he has a video and I'm going to play parts
of that video here that you can hear the audio from.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
But I just want to calls out the South the
South African president.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
Yes, and I want you but I want you guys
to hear what you know first, how Trump calls him out.
Let me see the articles plays of a would and
excuse me, turn the lights down, turn the lights down,
and just put this on.
Speaker 5 (10:44):
This right behind you.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
So, with the entire media pool in the Oval Office
with him, is it the old this is in the
Oval Office? It looks like it's some kind of other
meeting room. Is in a meeting room in the White House.
And the South African President, who you just heard said
that this is not a problem. This is a fringe
group that's leading because they basically want to har tied back. Okay,
they're not leaving and running for their lives. They are
(11:07):
leaving because they're racists, dirty racists that we're driving out
of the country. And Trump, you've been misinformed. So Trump
plays a video for him, and I want to play
a couple segments of this video for you guys, because
I want you guys to see what this man is
denying that happening in his own country. Okay, so here's
the video.
Speaker 6 (11:26):
There's nothing this parliament can do with or without you.
People are going to occupy land, will require no permission
from you, from the president, from no one.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
So this is inside you know, a political you know,
inside their government buildings. There's a political party arguing that
they are going to occupy these white farmers lands. They're
going to take them over, and there's nothing the government
can do about it.
Speaker 5 (11:51):
Must never be scared to kill. A revolution demand that
at some point that must be killing, because they're killing
is part of it. The pollution Act.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
That was a stadium filled with black South Africans. And
he's saying kill the boar killed the white farmer. The
boar is the white farmer. The video went on.
Speaker 5 (12:21):
Go after a white man. I feel a terra for
pain because you have touched a white man. But while
starting with this whiteness, were cut in the throat of whiteness.
Speaker 7 (12:36):
Shit to kill Comosa, the poor, the demo, till the
poor the demo.
Speaker 6 (12:54):
I don't know what's going to open in the future.
Speaker 4 (12:57):
I'm saying to you with not called for the killing
of white.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
People, at least for now.
Speaker 6 (13:02):
I can't get an the future when i'spropriate land without compensation,
whether they like it or not. If they object, they
can seek refugee in America.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
So this video went on and on and on, and
this South African president was squirming in his seat. You
could see he was obviously trying to get prepared for
what he was going to say. After the video stopped
and the lights went back on, and I want to
get to that. I want to get to what he said.
(13:33):
Right after the break, you're listening to red Pilled America's
fam Boogie, and we're talking about this South African president
and Trump confronting him in the White House like a man,
right in front of his face and right and for
the tire media to see. And so this is an
(13:55):
important issue here in the United States. I want to
get to that towards the end of this segment, but
the media immediately jumps on Trump. So part of the video,
it shows this long train of cars driving down this
road and there are white crosses on either side of
the road, and each one of those crosses represent a
(14:15):
dead farmer that was killed, a dead white farmer that
was killed in the country. I think Trump kind of
misspoke and he said, you know that it was a
grave site or something. He used a term like that,
like a grave site something like that, but it was monuments.
And the AP has also published stories on this where
they have this monument of and there's another monument another
(14:38):
location that has a cross of white crosses that creates
another cross, a bigger cross. The AP straight up says
that each one of these represents a kill, a dead
white farmer. Okay, So, but of course you have an
MSNBC reporter jump on not all of the other things
that were shown, not these major political leaders that were
(14:59):
inside the government talking about taking away what the white
farmers land, huge stadiums filled with this political party singing
kill the boar, killed the white farmer. She doesn't focus
on any of those things. Okay, she's this her name
is a Yamich. She's used to be over with the PBS.
I think she still does stuff with PBS, but she's
(15:20):
also over at MSNBC. She's a black woman, black reporter,
so she basically doesn't focus on any of those things
that's in the video. Instead, she focuses on the misspeak
of it being a grave site, and that's what she
focuses on. This is a woman that has been down
talking of these refugees from the very beginning. Here she
(15:42):
is when the Trump administration first talked about bringing in
these refugees. And once again, keep in mind what we're
talking about here, fifty nine farmers. We're not talking about
fifty thousand, ten thousand, five thousand and one thousand, fifty
nine farmers after tens of millions have come across the
southern border, after ten tens and hundreds of thousands have
(16:04):
come from Haiti and Somalia and what have you. But
these fifty nine farmers is a bridge too far. Here
she is talking about this issue on MSNBC.
Speaker 8 (16:15):
Trump administration. They're saying that essentially, these white South Africans
assimilate better, and they're also not as as much of
a security risk. That's really causing a lot of people
to be appalled. Frankly, And I also tell people that
there's violence that they're talking about that are dealing with
these Afrikaners. I've been hearing from people that say there
is violence in South Africa, but it's affecting everybody of
(16:35):
every single race.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Okay, So she's upset that he's saying that. I guess
the administration is putting this message out that these people
will easily assimilate. I mean, that's demonstrably true. Our country
was founded by the ancestors of these people's ancestors. Okay.
So and they're farmers, all right. So to claim that
they would not assimilate well or not assimate better than, say,
(16:59):
you know, Somalis or Haitians is just a waiting all
evidence that we've ever had here in the United States. Okay,
but this is the things that they're going crazy over.
Fifty nine people coming into this country. And this has
been an issue that has been going on for decades.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
You know, the first time that I ever heard about
anything like this is actually Eddie Murphy saying a very
very poignant song on SNL.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
Do we have a clip of that. Can we play
a clip with that?
Speaker 1 (17:27):
Please me too? So this was I think what I
want to say, in the eighties.
Speaker 3 (17:32):
It was it yeah, eighties, late seventies maybe.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Yes, And it was and it was a it was
an SNL skit. I think it was supposed to be Jamaicans.
But this is how long this kind of this mentality
has been around for. And there's always truth, by.
Speaker 3 (17:46):
The way, that's not happening. Yes, according to the.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Left, there's truth in comedy, okay. And so this is
Eddie Murphy doing a skit on SNL.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
A skit that, by the way, never gets played at it.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
No, it's completely though.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
It did get played a little bit for the fiftieth anniversary.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Did it really interesting?
Speaker 3 (18:02):
Yeah, they showed it had a clip like back when
we were a racist.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Yes, you're right, it was the racist segment. Okay.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
So here's play this.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
Here's Eddie Murphy and it says he's basically playing a
Jamaican band. It looks like that kind of a veterans club, okay,
Veterans club.
Speaker 7 (18:29):
Hall a Shanta in a Shanta town. We had no
mone so we are just it on the ground.
Speaker 1 (18:45):
I've played the music my father.
Speaker 3 (18:49):
He's digging ditch my mother.
Speaker 7 (18:54):
Shit, Dolundre live shop.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
Was a bitch.
Speaker 7 (18:59):
Week killed the white people.
Speaker 3 (19:05):
We make them alone, kill.
Speaker 7 (19:08):
The white people.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
But by my record, my record, yeah, it's killed the
white people, by my record. First. So this has been
going on and there's there's always truth in humor. This
mentality has been going on for decades of killing the
(19:37):
white people. So you have basically now the media, the
legacy media has been going full boar against Trump on this,
all right, and they also got the memo, and the
memo was that he was ambushing the South American excuse me,
South African president. And here is the media going with
this ambush story of the dramatic scene in the Oval
(19:59):
Office today, the tense confrontation President Trump ambush the President
of South Africa.
Speaker 8 (20:04):
Next another Oval Office meltdown, President Trump ambushing the President
of South Africa.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
President Trump is being accused of conducting something of a
diplomatic ambush of South Africa's president in the Oval Office.
Speaker 8 (20:15):
To be with you, I'm Katie to President Trump orchestrated.
Speaker 3 (20:18):
Another Oval Office ambush today.
Speaker 2 (20:20):
Today, Donald Trump meeting with the President of South Africa
and attempting to ambush and humiliate that leader.
Speaker 8 (20:28):
To Zelenski territory, where essentially he was a bit ambushed
inside the Oval office.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
Felt like an ambush in there, kind of like the
President's Lenski meeting in the Oval Office.
Speaker 3 (20:38):
This was an ambush.
Speaker 6 (20:40):
It was orchestrated. Errol Ramaposta brought his best diplomatic self
to this meeting, but nothing could have prepared him for
this multimedia ambush.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
What started as to some degree in ambush.
Speaker 3 (20:52):
Well, Katie, I mean it wasn't ambushed, ambush, ambushed, ambush
and ambush, ambushing, ambush and ambushed inside the Oval Office.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
Okay, so that was put out by Western lensman on X.
But as you can see, so this is the memo
that went out ambush, ambush, ambush, not the problem that
Donald Trump has revealed where people are getting killed there. Okay,
they have completely gaslt on that, completely gaslt on it.
This is why it's important. Ultimately, this is a model
(21:24):
that the radical left is using in Western civilization. If
you look at what's happening in South Africa, that model
is going to be applied or has been trying to
be applied in the United States, in the UK, in
Ireland and some of these other places that being let
all of these refugees into the country and replace the
(21:48):
white majority, minimize their numbers, and then allow violence to
occur to wipe those people out. You're seeing that happen
in South Africa, and this is something that the conservative
right has been talking about for decades in regards to
the invasion of the southern border. You're letting all these
Somalis in, You're letting all these Haitians in, people that
(22:11):
have been told for decades and decades that the white
man is bad, that the white man is colonizers, that
the white man stole your land. There's huge Mexican movements
that believe that the United States is still their land. Okay,
So this is something that when you look and see
what's happening in South Africa and then you see the
(22:32):
beginnings of that happening here in the United States. The
media calls this great replacement theory is how they've kind
of branded it as being anti Semitic or racist or
what have you, But ultimately it's what we see happening.
If you look at the demographics of the United States
pre nineteen sixty five to now, you see how that
(22:56):
process is in action and they just gaslight you on it. Now,
if you don't believe that peop are getting killed there
in South Africa, I highly suggest you watch either Katie
Hopkins The Killing Fields documentary or Laurence Southern's Farmlands documentary.
It goes into this and do some research on this yourself.
(23:17):
There's been killings going on in that country for decades
and they think it's okay, and they rationalize it because
these are quote unquote colonizers. You heard the South African
president say that. Literally, they think that they are they're
the ancestors of racists, quote unquote racists, so they must
be racists. And the media is going crazy over fifty
(23:38):
nine people coming into this country. Why you fight for
an MS thirteen person getting deported. You go crazy over
an MS thirteen person being deported, But these fifty nine farmers.
Who is anybody that sent any research on it knows
that these people are being targeted and systematically killed in
that country, Yet the media is going crazy on it.
(24:00):
This is the process that we see in action, and
it's important for you to see and watch what is
happening in South Africa because it is being applied here
if you look through it in that lens and you
look and see how the media covers this, you see
that they are covering it in the same way they gaslight,
(24:20):
the way that the South African president gaslight. They minimize it.
It's not happening. It's been debunked. The story that he's
saying is not right. It's wrong. No, those white farmers
are not dying. You see it time and time again,
the same process happening. And then we're supposed to not
believe our eyes when we start to see the percentages
(24:41):
and the demographics of this country changing. If you haven't
started watching What's an American yet, check it out, because
you see from the beginning how this country was founded
and how slowly but surely we're going to start getting
into that in the next two episodes, how citizenships started
to change and we started worrying less about assimilation and
more about diversity, and the country started to break down
(25:03):
when that started to happen. And of course it was
never a perfect, you know union. We've been you know,
I have always had to try to fix this country
and make it a better union. But there started to
be a breakdown that started to happen when they started
to break down what it meant to be an American
citizen here in the United States. What Trump did in
the White House with the South African president. No president
(25:26):
has been brave enough to take on this topic. This
is not something new, This has been happening for decades.
And these people they don't want to leave South Africa
because it's their land. They've been there for four hundred years,
it's their home. So you know, pay attention to that.
(25:47):
So we're going to go on to part two of
fam Boogie, where we're going to talk about the Scott
Adams tragic news but the silver lining in hearing about
his terminal illness. And we're going to also get into
that horrible terrorist attack in Washington, d C. And a
bunch more so join us in part two right now.