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But times, just like South Africa's government, are changing.
The money US taxpayers sent was supposed to help a country carrying one of the heaviest HIV struggles in the world. But now, after years of growing tension between D.C. and an anti-white, tyrannical Pretoria, Team Trump is pulling the plug and signing a death warrant for a country run by tyrants.
This multi-million dollar decision comes as South Africa faces down more concern over racism and hatred of white Afrikaners. Politicians and political groups can't stop chanting racist hate, and the U.S. is now making the tough decision to end the medical help to a country that is openly committing genocide against whites.
And don't let the mainstream media fool you into believing the "genocide talk" is fake news. It's not. It's all very disturbing and very real.
Matt Walsh presents the truth.
Why should the United States continue pouring hundreds of millions into a foreign government that is hostile to a vulnerable minority population? Meanwhile, many Americans are wondering how much of that money was actually reaching the people it was intended to help.
Likely pennies, if that.
Nobody wants ordinary South Africans to suffer, but you can't reward a hateful racist government with US taxpayers hard-earned money. If South Africa wants to govern itself and push hateful anti-white political venom, then they can't expect us to keep sending blank checks. There has to be accountability.
South Africa's response is also telling. Instead of sounding alarmed over the loss of roughly $400 million a year in HIV funding, officials brushed it off by saying they were already working on a "self-reliance plan."
That raises a fair question. If this money was absolutely essential to saving lives and preventing disease, why such a casual response? Why not condemn the anti-white rhetoric, reassure Washington, and fight to keep the funding?
Instead, the message sounded more like "Fine, we'll manage."