Conspiracy

LFN Takes Aim at SA’s Alcohol Epidemic

On a short drive along the N1 from Acasia to Midrand, my family and I encountered two separate intoxicated drivers — late morning, on a busy highway, still drinking while driving. That moment, together with recent revelations about South Africa’s R25 billion illicit alcohol underworld, forced a hard reckoning. This is not an abstract debate about “responsible drinking”. It is a confrontational call to South Africans to reconsider alcohol’s role in our crime, violence, family breakdown, moral erosion, and even our ability to resist corruption — starting now, at the beginning of the year.

The Silent Collapse: Why LFN and Real Activists Are Under Unprecedented Attack

While Liberty Fighters Network (LFN) continues battling more than twenty active legal challenges to protect the public from State over-reach, something far more dangerous is unfolding beneath the surface. Genuine activists across South Africa — from LFN to Jerm Warfare — are facing an unprecedented collapse in support, driven by engineered chaos, controlled narratives, and deliberate division. Supporters are being overwhelmed by fear-based distractions, pulled away from real activism, and pushed toward noise instead of truth. This “silent collapse” is not accidental. It is a strategy. And unless supporters recognise it, the voices fighting for their freedoms may disappear when they are needed most.

Boer Defends Zuma at African Union in Landmark Human Rights Hearing

On Thursday, 9 October 2025, a historic human rights hearing took place — quietly, virtually, and without public access. Former President Jacob Zuma’s complaint against the South African state was heard on the merits before all eleven Commissioners of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR). In a powerful moment of unity, Reyno De Beer, a white Boer and President of Liberty Fighters Network, stood alone to represent Zuma — opposing the State’s senior legal team. Though the hearing remains confidential, the fight for truth continues — and history is being written beyond the headlines.

White Boer Argues Zuma’s Case Tomorrow Before Eleven AU Commissioners

Tomorrow (9 October 2025), former President Jacob Zuma’s human rights case against the South African state will be heard — behind closed doors — by the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights. And leading the charge?
A white Boer, Reyno De Beer of Liberty Fighters Network — facing off against the State’s full senior legal team in a case that could reshape South Africa’s legal future. The hearing is confidential. The media is silent. But history is being made.

While South Africans Idolised Kirk, LFN Was in Court Fighting for Them

South Africa’s social media recently erupted over the death of American activist Charlie Kirk. Yet while many rushed to celebrate his words, Liberty Fighters Network (LFN) has for years been fighting in our own courts — without fanfare, without deep-pocket donors, and without media coverage. Unlike Kirk, whose influence was amplified by celebrity platforms, LFN takes the battle straight to the judiciary and international forums. Today we carry around 20 active court and international challenges against state over-reach and assist over 300 ordinary South Africans in family, criminal, and civil cases — all self-represented, all without expecting anything in return. While Kirk preached about Christian and conservative values, I have not only lived these convictions through daily activism but also captured them in a book that speaks directly to the challenges facing Christians in South Africa. South Africans must ask themselves: will we continue to idolise foreign celebrity activists, or will we finally stand with those actually fighting here at home?

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