cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/47630834
Since October 1, 2025, the US has accepted 6,668 refugees. Of those, 6,665 were white South Africans. Three—admitted last November—were from Afghanistan. No other refugees were admitted.
That data is backed up by the US Refugee Admissions Program, a federal public-private interagency collaboration program that works on refugee resettlement.> …
A presidential memo from September announced Trump’s intentions: that the refugees accepted “shall primarily be among Afrikaners from South Africa” and “other victims of illegal or unjust discrimination in their respective homelands.”
The Trump administration sees Afrikaners, an South African ethnic group descended primarily from European settlers, as victims of white “genocide”—a racist conspiracy theory promoted by many on the far right, notably Elon Musk.



massive racism, war crimes, pedophilia, government by bribery, weekly stock and crypto pump and dumps. We need AI to design new ways to be corrupt, we are running out of ideas.
Actually I am going the extra mile on this comment and asked chatgpt. It did ok but I expected more. Not sure how much water I just vaporized. But most of these have already been done by trump so I wonder if he already asked chatgpt for these:
Some avenues in the U.S. include: Cryptocurrency-related fraud — Pump-and-dump schemes, fake token launches, fraudulent investment platforms, and misuse of crypto’s complexity to deceive investors. AI-enabled scams — Using AI-generated voices, images, or messages to impersonate executives, relatives, or public figures in fraud schemes. Pandemic and disaster-relief fraud — Misrepresenting eligibility for government aid programs or exploiting emergency spending programs. Procurement and contracting abuse — Steering government contracts to favored companies, sometimes through undisclosed relationships or conflicts of interest. Insider trading using alternative data — Obtaining nonpublic information through increasingly complex networks rather than traditional corporate leaks. Influence peddling and opaque consulting arrangements — Receiving payments for access, introductions, or influence while avoiding direct lobbying disclosures. Healthcare billing fraud — Exploiting complex insurance and reimbursement systems through unnecessary services, phantom billing, or fraudulent claims. Online marketplace fraud — Fake reviews, counterfeit goods, manipulated rankings, and deceptive e-commerce practices. Cyber-enabled financial crime — Business email compromise, ransomware-related extortion, and other technology-driven frauds. Nonprofit or charity misuse — Creating organizations that appear charitable while diverting funds for private benefit.