As a South African it’s crazy to see how even American politics is just like ours. There is an obvious scandal around Epstein, everyone knows it, yet the government just says move on nothings going to happen and it stays just like that, nothings happens. No accountability. This obvious lack of consequences has a huge impact on a nations psyche and everything starts to deteriorate. Hold Epstein collaborators accountable, hold the Russian Collusion Hoax accountable. Or face the collapse of everything you hold dear. Trust me, we’ve lived it. It’s not about left or right, it’s about preserving a nation.
Dear American People,
I’m writing from South Africa, a country I love, but one that’s been gutted by corruption for all my 39 years. We’ve lived through what I see creeping into your nation, and I’m begging you to wake up before you end up like us.
Corruption here isn’t just a few shady deals—it’s a cancer that’s rotted everything. Our former president, Jacob Zuma, sold state-owned enterprises to the highest bidder, built mansions with hundreds of millions of rands, and laughed in our faces when caught. No punishment. Nothing. He’s even started a new political party now. That kind of impunity screws with a nation’s soul.
When the top dogs get away with it, everyone thinks, “Why not me?” Police get rich off bribes. Need a driver’s license or ID? You grease palms, or good luck. That’s our normal, and it’s killing us. The corrupt don’t just steal—they divide. They pit us against each other—black versus white, this group versus that—stirring up fake scandals to keep us angry and distracted while they rob us blind. You’re seeing this in America now: divisive politics to cover up the real problem. Corruption’s why we can’t trust our government, even on big policies like land expropriation without compensation.
It’s been all over your news, and here’s the truth: people here aren’t just scared of losing land—they’re scared because we know our corrupt leaders will use it to enrich themselves or distract us while they keep stealing. The idea and intent of it is honorable and needed, but no one trusts the government. ANYONE who says they do, are on the TAKE or a liar. If our government wasn’t so rotten, we’d trust them to act in good faith. But we don’t, because corruption’s at the core of everything. And it’s expensive. Corruption steals the money meant for public services—police, hospitals, roads.
So, taxes skyrocket to cover the mess, but it’s never enough because the money keeps vanishing. You end up paying twice: taxes for services that don’t work, then again for private security because the police are underfunded or crooked. Our public hospitals, once world-class—hell, we invented the heart transplant!—are now death traps. You need pricey medical cover to survive. Our fuel taxes, meant for road maintenance, get pocketed, so potholes wreck cars, drunk drivers bribe cops, and insurance costs soar.
Life here is unaffordable because corruption takes 80% of the pie, leaving scraps for the rest of us. Worse, corruption bloats the government itself. South Africa’s parliament is one of the biggest in the world—not because we need it, but because corruption breeds more ways to steal. Politicians and cronies create new departments, hand out cabinet posts, or trade contracts for silence. “Grease my palm, or I’ll rat you out,” they say. That’s what DOGE was starting to expose in America—new departments created not to serve, but to funnel money to the corrupt. It’s the same game we’ve played here for decades. America, you’re on this path.
You might’ve thought corruption was just skimming 1% off the top, but it’s growing to look like our 80%. DOGE showed you a glimpse of the rot, but if you don’t demand accountability—real consequences, not just headlines—it’ll spread. Hold your leaders accountable. Punish the corrupt. Don’t fall for their divisive tricks. If you don’t, you’ll end up like us: a nation where corruption isn’t the exception, it’s the rule.
From someone who’s lived it,
A South African ---