The Negroid S. African's are now going after the Jews....when will America step in to do something about the deteriorating situation there? The Jews are finally waking up....they did not seem too concerned about the horror the White Farmers have been confronted with for a long time now.....but now the Negroes in S. Africa are attacking Jews....perhaps now they will use their cosiderable influence around the world to speak out about what is going on in S.Africa.
South African Jewish Groups Alarmed by Spike in Anti-Semitic Attacks
Why would we?
What would you want done if we did?
and
How will you involve yourself?
Similar questions were probably posed whilst the Nazi Holocaust was going on. Anyhow it appears you have no problem with sexual violence, the murder of farmers, not even to mention what they are doing to the Jews.
Tracey Lomax, a South African lawyer, with daughter Jaime at their cottage home, where the family moved after a terrifying home robbery five years ago outside Johannesburg. The experience prompted Lomax to reconsider her place in South Africa's fractured racial landscape. (Robyn Dixon / Los Angeles Times)
On a lazy summer's night, a South African family drifted indoors after arriving home. A gunshot rang out and the evening flipped.
Gunmen materialized in the low light. A second shot, and Tracey Lomax saw her husband fall.
"You're not the boss!" one of them kept yelling furiously at him.
Lomax didn't betray her terror. Quite the opposite.
She was a liberal white lawyer, known for taking on pro bono work for poor blacks. Yet she found herself, instantly and uneasily, assuming the apartheid-era role of the "white madam": calm, firm, in control and used to telling black people what to do, even if they had guns.
As the ordeal wore on, the most aggressive of the gunmen forced her into the master bedroom. "He threw me down on the bed and said, 'If you don't give me jewelry now, I'll stick you.' I knew he meant rape." She replied firmly, "We don't behave like that. We're not savages."
"I took his hand off my shoulder. I said, 'No, we are not doing this.' And I walked back into the other room." She spoke to him as if addressing a child — or giving orders to a gardener, telling him to plant a shrub in this place, not that place.
A night of violence that shattered a South African's view of her white privilege