Conspiracy

LFN vs Steenhuisen: Poultry in Court, Cattle Next — Hypocrisy Unmasked

Liberty Fighters Network (LFN) has already dragged Minister John Steenhuisen, DA leader, to court over his secret Avian Flu vaccination decision — and now we are demanding answers on his Foot-and-Mouth Disease (FMD) vaccine rollout too. For years the DA accused the ANC of secrecy and arrogance, yet Steenhuisen is doing exactly the same: spending over R70 million, bypassing the Department of Health, and rolling out mass vaccination without proof of safety, transparency, or public consultation. LFN will not let this hypocrisy go unchallenged.

💉 LFN Takes On Steenhuisen: Poultry Vaccination Permit Lands Democratic Alliance Leader in Court

When vaccines are approved without consultation, and the people are expected to swallow the consequences — quite literally — LFN stands firm. In a bold legal move, Liberty Fighters Network has taken Democratic Alliance leader and Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen to court over his secretive decision to mass-vaccinate South Africa’s poultry. The same state that once urged citizens to trust COVID-19 vaccines — three of which were later deregistered following LFN’s relentless legal challenge — now expects us to trust again, without question. This time, it’s not in our arms… it’s on our plates.

The Spirit of Don Quixote Lives Through Liberty Fighters Network

We at Liberty Fighters Network are often seen as lone challengers against powerful institutions — mocked, marginalised, and misunderstood. But like Don Quixote, we remain steadfast in our conviction. The difference? Our giants are not imagined — they are real, systemic, and entrenched. This is not madness. It is resistance. And if the cost of standing alone is the price for standing for justice, then so be it.

Unemployed or Not

Unemployment in South Africa: Fact, Fiction, or Misclassification?

South Africa’s unemployment crisis may not be as clear-cut as official statistics suggest. While data shows over 43% of the population is jobless, daily life reveals a thriving informal economy, cultural dependency, and even professional begging shaping how employment is understood and reported. This article challenges conventional definitions and calls for a more honest, realistic assessment of South Africa’s labour landscape.

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