872: Winners
America loves winners—now more than ever. But how do you get to a win in 2025 America? We watch someone trying to score a win in a game whose rules are being made up as she plays.
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- Prologue: Ira talks to producer Diane Wu about an informal survey she’s done with the staff of This American Life about a phrase Ira says a lot that includes the word “winners.” (8 minutes)
- Act One: Two people see one of President Trump’s first executive orders and get excited, and then get to work. (30 minutes)
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Transcript
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Speaker 2 Okay, so here's something that I learned about myself this last week. Today's show, we're doing a show about winners.
Speaker 2 And as we talked about this idea here at the radio show, I learned that there is something I apparently say all the time here at our office as we make the show.
Speaker 2 And I really had no idea I said this at all until a few months ago when somebody on staff pointed this out.
Speaker 2 And back when that happened, I felt like, sure, yes, I guess I have said that every now and then over the years. But this week I learned I had that wrong.
Speaker 3 Yeah, you say it all the time.
Speaker 2 I am joined in the studio now by my coworker, Diane Wu. Hey there, Diane.
Speaker 3 Hi, Ira.
Speaker 4 It's something that I have noticed, but I didn't talk about it with my coworkers until this week. And when I went to them and taped those conversations, everybody knew what I was talking about.
Speaker 5 Whenever you feel like you're trying to work on a story and you're in your low point, He kind of gives you this look and he's like, no, you're a winner.
Speaker 7 You know, you know, like how in Harry Potter, they were just like you're a wizard iri that's what he kind of does with winners the thing ira always says is let's win we're winners we're winners we can do this i think when i first started working here like as like an intern basically
Speaker 2 i can't remember what it was but i told him like i don't think i can do that and he's like that's a loser mentality we're winners And then I remember thinking like,
Speaker 2
oh no, I am a winner. I like to win things.
He spoke to something. That worked on me.
Speaker 5 I can't believe anyone actually feels that way. That's so great
Speaker 3 for them.
Speaker 3 It's like a moment when you look around a table and you can see on everybody's faces that they're a little bit, that they're tired and they're not feeling like things are going to work out.
Speaker 3 And then Ira will come in with,
Speaker 3
we got this. This is going to be great.
This is going to be so easy. This is going to just be be so easy.
We know what we have to do. We're winners.
We just have to do it. Let's win.
Let's win.
Speaker 2 I say that is so weird to hear everybody talking about that.
Speaker 2 Because I think I just was saying this without thinking. You know, I think that's why I didn't realize I was saying it and how often I was saying it.
Speaker 2
Like, it's not this deeply calculated, I must motivate the troops thing. It's just that some part of me just chemically is just feels like, oh, come on, let's go.
We're winners.
Speaker 3 Let's go.
Speaker 2 Thank you.
Speaker 4 And some people find this really motivating when you do it. But others, when you're saying this stuff about winners,
Speaker 5 it just does nothing for them.
Speaker 8 They just don't get it.
Speaker 3 Wait, really?
Speaker 4 Yeah, they're like, why does he keep doing this?
Speaker 5 What is he talking about?
Speaker 9 It's terrible. It doesn't do anything but make me angry.
Speaker 4 This, of course, is our coworker, Nadia.
Speaker 9 It made me eye roll, and it made me completely be like, I don't want to do this.
Speaker 4 The winner thing also doesn't work for our coworker, Lily.
Speaker 5
The first times I would hear it, it was like a tell to me. I'm like, oh, shoot, I'm not going to fit here at all.
This guy thinks he's a winner.
Speaker 5
All these people that I don't know very well yet are also apparently winners. Apparently they hire for winners.
And
Speaker 5 that's certainly not me.
Speaker 5 Because I think of winners, people who think of themselves as winners. I'm like, you guys are just a bunch of like try-hard narcs, you know, and I'm like not about winning.
Speaker 5 Like I'm very much like, I identify as a loser. I am kind of a loser.
Speaker 3 I'm a quitter.
Speaker 2 Can I just stop the tape? That is such a funny thing to hear somebody say out loud.
Speaker 5 I used to play sports like kind of competitively, which I think would surprise everyone who knows me. Like, I don't seem like someone who would play sports.
Speaker 5 And, like, how competitive, like, how intensely were you playing sports? Okay, well, my team in high school won state in California, my soccer team, which was like a huge deal. A huge deal.
Speaker 5 It's a huge state. It's a huge state.
Speaker 5 And then I played soccer in college, too. And then
Speaker 5 one time... when I was, I guess it was like the first season of
Speaker 5 soccer in college, and we had to do like a a mental
Speaker 4 some kind of a test to like test how we were mentally some assessment this was like some kind of personality test to see how mentally tough and competitive you are and
Speaker 5 my coach pulled me aside afterward and he was just like just so you know like everyone on the team other than you was like upper 80s and 90s he's like and your score was like 34.
Speaker 5 Your brain is like not wired like the rest of the people on these teams like you're wired like a grumpy pessimistic loser
Speaker 5 and he's like i don't mind he's like but we got a lot of progress to make here but it just kind of it like told me something about myself at that time i'm like i am like that why am i here this is why i don't relate to these people do you think that's still you
Speaker 5 yes
Speaker 4 And so for years here at the show, she really didn't get it, the winner's thing.
Speaker 4 But then at some point, a couple years in, when we were working on that story, it was, I think she said it was when we were working on that story about Albertville.
Speaker 3 You remember that one? Of course.
Speaker 2 We were traveling together and spending a lot of hours together, you and me, and her, and Miki, yeah, like super, super long days, right?
Speaker 4 Um, at some point, when we were working on that story, she felt it shift, like she was so worn down.
Speaker 4 And one day, you said it, and it just sounded different to her.
Speaker 5 And now
Speaker 5 I kind of like it because I feel like I understand now that the idea is more just to like
Speaker 5 help you gear up for like what's ahead of you. Um,
Speaker 5 like at one point, Ira was just like, It's like we have to get up a mountain, and there are mules who are gonna bring us up the mountain, and we just have to like encourage these mules to drag us up the mountain.
Speaker 5
But we're the mules, so we just have to like beat ourselves up this mountain. And I was like, Yeah, that's exactly what's happening.
And it's like it does do something to like
Speaker 5 give you a burst of um confidence, I guess.
Speaker 2 Ladies and gentlemen, I know how corny this idea is and gets it in a thousand locker room pep talks and Nike ads and movie speeches before the big climactic whatever, but it is nonetheless true.
Speaker 2 Deciding you're a winner, deciding you can do it, has a power. It creates possibilities.
Speaker 2 And deciding you're a winner isn't just something that Americans do, but it is such a fundamental thing for so many Americans.
Speaker 2 It's Muhammad Ali and Billie Jean King and Zoran Mamdani, but also Donald Trump and Simone Biles and Frank Sinatra. And so much of this country was made by outsiders who traveled here.
Speaker 2
So many of them just deciding and believing that they could succeed here and have a better life. Maybe that's why this mentality is so common here and feels so American.
We are the mule.
Speaker 2
Today in our show, winners. We're going to watch them in action in a tough game where the rules are literally being made up as they go along.
From WBEZ Chicago, CIS American Life, stay with us.
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Speaker 2 DisAmerican Life, Act 1. Winners Welcome.
Speaker 2 We've done a lot of stories this year about people who were negatively affected, in one way or another by big new policies rolled out by the Trump administration.
Speaker 2 People who have been detained by ICE or who lost government jobs or had their funding cut or been kicked out of the military or found their black student union can no longer be called a black student union.
Speaker 2 But the story we're about to tell is about other people.
Speaker 2 People who saw new Trump administration policies, who saw one of the hundreds of executive orders that the president has signed, and they thought to themselves, holy cow, that's great news for me personally.
Speaker 2 They were targeted by some new policy and happy about it.
Speaker 2 This particular group of winners is in the news this week, but Hannah Jaffe Wald has been following the story from the beginning through many turns. You're about to hear drama, suspense, rivalry.
Speaker 2 This is a true story about trying to win in 2025 America. Her story begins, as so many do these days, with an announcement from the White House.
Speaker 3 Here's Hanna.
Speaker 3
The word went out in February of this year. It was Executive Order 14204, title, Addressing Egregious Actions of the Republic of South Africa.
Do you remember where you were?
Speaker 12 Yeah, so it's actually a funny story.
Speaker 12
I was asleep, obviously. It was South African time.
It was day during the US, but night here.
Speaker 12 And I woke up and it was like three in the morning, and I saw like a media storm. So I think I was one of the first Afrikaners to actually see it.
Speaker 3
US Stridem, fresh-faced, serious Afrikaner, a white minority in South Africa. US is the leader of a whites-only town.
Yes, one of those exists. It's all Afrikaners in the Northern Cape, in the desert.
Speaker 3
It's called Orania. US grew up there.
So it's 3 a.m. and he's reading this executive order from President Trump.
Speaker 3 It talked about a, quote, shocking disregard of citizens' rights happening in South Africa, unjust discrimination against Afrikaners.
Speaker 3
U.S. has been talking about these exact issues, the egregious actions mentioned in the executive order for years.
President Trump was using the same words he uses, calling for the same changes.
Speaker 12 I mean, we could almost not believe our eyes when we saw,
Speaker 12 you know, the president of the mightiest country in the world mentioning us specifically.
Speaker 3 It sounds like you go to like a like a rock concert and your favorite band up there is like, happy birthday, Billy. And you're like, oh my God, I'm Billy.
Speaker 13 Yes.
Speaker 12 It's basically that feeling.
Speaker 3 An incredible win, a high.
Speaker 3 And then, suddenly, a bit of a crash.
Speaker 3 A few sentences later in the executive order, U.S.
Speaker 3 saw the order's solution to address this unjust targeting of Afrikaners was for the United States to resettle, quote, Afrikaner refugees escaping government-sponsored race-based discrimination, end quote.
Speaker 12 So that was, I think, it was for all of us a big, big, big surprise.
Speaker 3
Refugees, U.S. thought.
As in, leave the country?
Speaker 3 He didn't want to leave the country. He wanted President Trump to help Afrikaners get their own territory in Africa.
Speaker 3
And he wanted President Trump to pressure the South African government to get rid of what he sees as racist laws against white people. He was not looking to come to the U.S.
and become American.
Speaker 12 Afrikaners belong in Africa.
Speaker 12 So it's kind of,
Speaker 12
we don't want to be refugees. We want to be here.
We are African. We belong here.
The Afrikaners are a specific group with a proud history.
Speaker 3 The history that you may know about Afrikaners is that they invented apartheid.
Speaker 3 that for nearly half a century, Afrikaners maintained a brutal and violent system of racial segregation in South Africa that denied black South Africans political and economic power.
Speaker 3 The right to vote, the right to own land, to equal housing, education, wages, to move freely, speak freely, and choose where to live, to run businesses. U.S.
Speaker 3 is referring to the Afrikaner history before all of that. the mostly Dutch settlers who came to South Africa and became Afrikaners more than three centuries ago, set up farms, fought the British.
Speaker 12
We moved moved away from British occupation with oxen wagon and we are farming people. We are people of the open field.
We modernized our language. We did the first heart transplant and so on.
Speaker 12
And now all of that's taken away. We have no political say.
We have no place.
Speaker 3 When South Africa became a democracy after apartheid in 1994, It was one of the few countries in the world that was trying to build a democracy with lots of different people, different races, religions, with 11 official national languages.
Speaker 3
The new South Africa branded itself the Rainbow Nation. Rainbowism emphasized unity, and the U.S.
felt the Afrikaner identity was shoved aside and threatened.
Speaker 3 Afrikaners were expected to be just South African.
Speaker 12 The issue is with Afrikaners that we're a very small minority in a very large country.
Speaker 12 Just demographic realities, being such a minority that we have so little influence politically and economically um you know
Speaker 3 who's gonna call the shots it's always the majority and minorities it's trampled on a word on the trampling of white south africans they own nearly three times the farmland of black south africans and hold more than 60 percent of the top corporate jobs in south africa while being around seven percent of the population There was no massive wealth or land redistribution after apartheid fell.
Speaker 3 Instead, the government has adopted various policies to try to rectify vast racial imbalances in employment, education, resources, everything over time, bit by bit.
Speaker 3 These were various affirmative action type efforts, like requiring companies to diversify their shareholders.
Speaker 3 And recently, a new land reform law that would allow the government, in rare cases, to take property without compensation. That's the trampling U.S.
Speaker 3 is talking about, and President Trump's executive order is talking about.
Speaker 3 The only problem for the U.S. with the executive order was that whole refugee bit.
Speaker 12
And I gathered some of the decision makers in our community, and we decided to immediately react to this. So, we had a very, very serious conversation.
We understood it as a watershed moment.
Speaker 12 And we said, Well, we're going to give a very simple message that we will put on social media, hoping to reach the Trump administration with that.
Speaker 12 And our message was basically:
Speaker 12 firstly, firstly, thank you.
Speaker 12
And secondly, we appreciate it. But then we don't want to be refugees in another man's country.
We have a three-word message for President Trump. And that is, rather, help us here.
And help us here
Speaker 12 became our slogan.
Speaker 3
The two big Afrikaner advocacy groups in South Africa were on the same page. Thank you, you see us and our plight.
And no thank you on that whole refugee part. Help us here.
Speaker 3
U.S. went with the delegation of Afri Connors to America to lobby in DC and New York and the message seemed to land.
They made international headlines. No thanks.
Speaker 3
White South Africans turned down Trump's U.S. immigration offer.
Afrikaner communities reject Trump's resettlement offer.
Speaker 9 We were mortified.
Speaker 3 You were what? Mortified.
Speaker 14 Mortified.
Speaker 14 Mortified because
Speaker 13 hold on a minute.
Speaker 14
We don't want President Trump to take this away because we apparently said no, thank you. We don't say no, thank you.
We accept.
Speaker 3 Sam Busa, fuming from her home on the eastern coast of South Africa, KwaZulu-Natal.
Speaker 3 These big Afrikaner membership groups going to America, acting like they're speaking for everyone.
Speaker 14 Needless to say, the people that were not their members and did not think that way became very angry and then they all found me.
Speaker 3
U.S. efforts efforts might have been the end of things, except for Sam popped up.
She saw that executive order and Sam had different ideas for what to do with it.
Speaker 3 Sam is 60 years old, semi-retired businesswoman, white, constitutionally busy. She is rarely doing one thing at a time.
Speaker 14 I'm going to put the kettle on while I'm talking to you.
Speaker 3 Okay, perfect.
Speaker 14 And have a tea break. Wonderful.
Speaker 3 Yes. She told me the story.
Speaker 14 There I was happily getting on with my organic gardening at the beginning of February 2025
Speaker 14 and out of the blue came this executive order to everybody's shock and surprise let's be honest so I immediately thought myself I'm I'm I'm all for this but still the idea of refugee was a bit of a shock did you think like refugees like that's not a word that I would guess you had associated with yourself before no no no it was actually a horrifying word you know what the word refugee conjures up is raggedy people that have run across a border
Speaker 14 that are escaping a war zone and
Speaker 14 are sort of hiding under a tree
Speaker 14 waiting for a helicopter to rescue them. You know, that's what it conjures, doesn't it? And
Speaker 14 so it was totally foreign to me. And I looked at this and I thought, wow.
Speaker 3 The word refugee was totally foreign to Sam, just like it was to U.S.
Speaker 3
But Sam still felt sure the executive order was intended for her. And she wanted it to be for her.
Sam wanted to move to America.
Speaker 3 She was convinced there was no future for her young adult sons in South Africa, that the country was too dangerous, and that as white men, they'd be discriminated against and unable to succeed.
Speaker 3 So this seemed like a great opportunity, if she could figure it out.
Speaker 3 This executive order, like most of the 200-plus executive orders that have come out this year, it's not a detailed document. It's two pages.
Speaker 3
It's a broad announcement that injustice is happening in South Africa. Afrikaners are the victims, and they're invited to be refugees in America.
What it does not say is how this will work.
Speaker 3 How many people, who qualifies, how to apply. How do these particular people fit within the existing laws that govern the refugee program? How will they get through the vetting process?
Speaker 3 It leaves all those details to be sorted out at some other time by someone else.
Speaker 3 Sam took it upon herself to be that someone.
Speaker 3
The first thing to tackle was that word refugee. Sam was not a refugee.
Or was she? Could she possibly be one?
Speaker 14 You know, after 40 years in business, I've got a pretty decent knowledge of legal stuff. So I just went.
Speaker 14 and looked in the obvious places like okay so who runs refugee programs So it's okay, so it's PRM. Okay, who else is involved?
Speaker 14 Oh, USCIS I went on their websites and tried to understand the difference between refugees and asyles.
Speaker 14 But it didn't take me very long. I was quite obsessed.
Speaker 3 A key thing Sam wanted to know, could she qualify as a refugee if she hadn't fled the country? In all the government websites she went to, the answer seemed pretty straightforward. No.
Speaker 3
A refugee is someone who is living, quote, outside any country of such person's nationality. Refugees are people who flee.
Sam was living at home in her home country.
Speaker 3 But then she found a section of immigration law, 101A-42B, which allows a refugee to be in-country under special circumstances specified by the president. Aha, this is how President Trump could do it.
Speaker 3 Maybe she could qualify.
Speaker 14 It became apparent to me that, you know, there are many types of refugee programs and that
Speaker 14 it wouldn't be a case of expecting South Africans to,
Speaker 14 you know, literally go into FEMA tents or anything like that. It became pretty clear to me that these things can be rather dignified and quite orderly.
Speaker 3 This was her first stab at interpreting the language in the executive order, figuring out how she could fit the word refugee. legally and comfortably.
Speaker 3 Next, the executive order uses the words, quote, unjust racial discrimination. It says it's for the victims of discrimination.
Speaker 3 Sam was confident her family qualified for that. She says specifically, her young adult sons have been denied or would be denied jobs in South Africa because they're white.
Speaker 3 But if Sam went to the officials who screen refugee applications to America, she wasn't sure discrimination would actually be enough to qualify as a refugee. She read the main law governing U.S.
Speaker 3 immigration, the Immigration and Nationality Act, and.
Speaker 14 The word discrimination is not used
Speaker 14 in dealing with refugees around the world.
Speaker 14 They never use the word discrimination, yet, President Trump used the word discrimination.
Speaker 14 Quite possibly, the word discrimination in the executive order probably wasn't his best choice of word. I think he probably meant to say persecution.
Speaker 14 Because
Speaker 14 persecution is required.
Speaker 3 Another puzzle for Sam to figure out. Meanwhile.
Speaker 14 I decided to put up a little website, questions and answers.
Speaker 14 And then whatever my findings are, let me share those with my fellow citizens.
Speaker 13 Okay.
Speaker 14 I came across the word Americaners, which I thought was cute as anything.
Speaker 3
Americaners is Afrikaans for Americans. She registered the domain and set up a Facebook page.
This became a hub for other white South Africans who'd heard about the executive order.
Speaker 14 So we we started disseminating what we
Speaker 14 in our personal capacity had investigated and obviously there were lots of I don't know's that went with all of that so I don't want to give anybody the opinion that somehow we knew what were what were the lot of the like repeat questions or most commonly one of the most difficult ones was
Speaker 14 they say Afrikaners.
Speaker 14
Now in South Africa, you're American. You don't understand the nuance of the cultures in South Africa.
So, half of the population is English-speaking, of the white population is English-speaking.
Speaker 14 So, all of the folks like myself that's of British descent was thinking, oh, no, they're just going to take the Afrikaners and not me, the Englishman.
Speaker 3 You know, you're not Afrikaner.
Speaker 14 So, yeah.
Speaker 14 No, I'm not an Afrikaner.
Speaker 3 Pause.
Speaker 3 This was surprising to me. Sam was running a website website for people interested in Trump's offer to Afrikaners.
Speaker 3 Afrikaners are generally descended from Dutch settlers, speak Afrikaans as their first language. White South Africans who are not Afrikaners, generally English ancestry.
Speaker 3
We were 20 minutes into talking. It hadn't actually occurred to me to ask if she indeed was Afrikaner.
She's not.
Speaker 3 But this was another spot where the word in the executive order did not precisely fit Sam until Sam figured out how it could fit.
Speaker 14 But the truth is, these groups have mixed, intermingled across hundreds of years. So to prove one person is an Afrikaner and the other
Speaker 14 doesn't have any Afrikaner is almost impossible without genealogies for everybody. So we did make a deduction.
Speaker 14 I'm sure as an English person, you'll be included, but we always had to put a disclaimer on that because we just don't know what an American think the word Afrikaner means.
Speaker 3 So, you thought, okay, they might mean only Afrikaners, meaning strictly Afrikaner background, ancestry, speaks Afrikaans. They might mean somebody who lives on a farm.
Speaker 3 They might just mean white people in South Africa.
Speaker 14 Correct. You know, so I cautiously told everybody that it was my opinion that it included all South Africans, English, and Afrikaans.
Speaker 3 All white South Africans.
Speaker 14 But I was only 95% sure.
Speaker 3
Almost everyone who came to the Americaners Facebook page had the same question Sam had. Do I qualify to go to the U.S.
under this executive order? Here's a comment. Not a funny or rude question.
Speaker 3 Just want to know what criteria is acceptable candidate. How bad does your experience need to be?
Speaker 3 Another.
Speaker 3 How will the USA decide if I'm suitable? I'm white, Afrikaans, male, hardworking, with strong Christian beliefs in a country where I'm prosecuted for my skin color, my language, and my beliefs.
Speaker 3 Does that make me, quote, suitable, or must I first be shot and stabbed? There were other questions too.
Speaker 14 I'm 56, aren't I too old? Or, you know, am I allowed to bring my dogs? And is it just for farmers? Because a lot of people were talking about the farmers all the time.
Speaker 14 President Trump's also mentioned a lot about farmers.
Speaker 3 What are the answers?
Speaker 14 Okay, so myself and one of the volunteers did is we analyzed every single word that had been said by the president and the
Speaker 14
State Department. beyond the executive order.
So the fact sheet that was put out as well as the FAQs that were put out.
Speaker 14 But what we were saying to people is, look, a refugee program in general does not discriminate in whether you all, you know, whether you're 90 or you're two.
Speaker 14 If you're in peril, refugee programs are accepting of any human being in peril.
Speaker 14
So those, that sort of deduction we were able to make and answer lots of questions. Can you bring your dogs? No.
Well, you can, but you'll do that privately out of your own pocket.
Speaker 14 But the refugee program is not inviting your pets.
Speaker 3 This is the level of detail Sam was helping people to think through.
Speaker 3 One problem she still had to solve, the question of persecution. To qualify as a refugee, one must be able to articulate a past experience of persecution or fear of future persecution.
Speaker 14 Yeah, well, I've had some events in my life which
Speaker 14 I would struggle to classify as persecution.
Speaker 14 So my past persecution
Speaker 14 records are somewhat scant.
Speaker 14 They barely make the persecution grade, okay? So they would rise to severe discrimination. So
Speaker 14 look, I've been held at gunpoint with my baby in my arms, okay? But I can't say that that's persecution. What I can say is that's just terrible crime.
Speaker 3
South Africa does have terrible crime. Crime that is experienced by every demographic group.
But Sam looked at the precise definition.
Speaker 14 You can either talk about something that's happened to you that was persecution,
Speaker 14 or you can can talk about so it's and or
Speaker 3 or you can talk about your fear of future persecution this became a big topic in the americaners group what counts as future persecution in the various group chats and on the facebook page there was one video that got passed around often as potential evidence It's a video of a black politician from a minority party in South Africa leading a chant called Kill the Boar at a political rally.
Speaker 3
Boar is farmers in Afrikaans. Kill the boar is an old anti-apartheid chant.
Afrikaner groups say it's clearly intended to incite violence. And the lyrics are pretty stark, kill the boar, the farmer.
Speaker 3 There have been several court cases about the use of the song over the years.
Speaker 3 Most recently, in an appeal, the judge at the Constitutional Court wrote that a reasonably well-informed person would understand that the politician was using a historic struggle song as a provocative way to advance a political agenda.
Speaker 3 It was a form of political speech and therefore protected under the country's freedom of speech laws. Elon Musk posted the video on X.
Speaker 3 Musk, South African-born, wrote, quote, they are openly pushing for a genocide of white people in South Africa.
Speaker 14 So my fear of future persecution and future violence is way greater than my history.
Speaker 14 My fear of future persecution is basically being skinned alive in a genocide. I I mean,
Speaker 14 you've got government ministers and the constitutional court
Speaker 14 endorse, not endorsing, but allowing,
Speaker 14 saying that they're entitled to call for the death of white people in South Africa.
Speaker 14 And then you've got the government that is completely silent on them calling for the death of white South Africans. So
Speaker 14 if that's not persecution, I don't know what is.
Speaker 3 Sam had made it through each tricky word in the executive order. Refugee, African or discrimination.
Speaker 3 She'd interpreted the order and translated it and figured out how it would work, how it was legal, and who could qualify.
Speaker 3 Her and all the other like-minded people she'd organized into a group through her website.
Speaker 3
Six weeks after the executive order came out, Sam wrote her own message to President Trump. U.S.
Stridem's Communique had a polite polite three-point summary. Sam's did too.
Speaker 3 But her message was very different. Sam says hers was signed by 27,000 people in two weeks.
Speaker 14 So the memorandum said three things.
Speaker 14
Thank you. We appreciate what you've done by reaching out and extending this offer.
Number two,
Speaker 14 we accept your offer. And number three, we will come to contribute, not to drain.
Speaker 3 The Americaners delivered their memorandum to the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria, and Sam posted a photo to the Facebook page.
Speaker 3 She wrote, We've gathered, we've organized, we've collaborated, we've spoken, we've succeeded.
Speaker 8 The first group of white South Africans granted refugee status by the Trump administration arrived in the U.S. Monday.
Speaker 16 The United States has welcomed around 50 white South Africans following President May 12, 2025.
Speaker 3 59 white South Africans.
Speaker 3
Sam Busa was not one of them. She was watching from South Africa.
While Sam was organizing Americaners, the U.S.
Speaker 3 government had been rapidly putting together a small group of South African refugees, bringing them over on a private chartered plane to Dulles Airport.
Speaker 3 At Dulles, they stood in a loosely arranged line holding small American flags, their children in pajamas smiling, unsure which camera to look at, as they were personally welcomed by the deputy secretaries of both the U.S.
Speaker 3 State Department and the Department of Homeland Security.
Speaker 17 Welcome! Welcome to the United States of America.
Speaker 17 It makes me so happy to see you with our flag in your hands and that flag symbolizes liberty for so many of us.
Speaker 17 I want you all to know that you are really welcome here and that we respect what you have had to deal with these last few years. We respect the long tradition of your people
Speaker 17 and what you have accomplished over the years and I am sure that you will be successful.
Speaker 18
Everybody within DHS, we've been so excited to be able to get you guys here. After all the, I was tracking your flight 12 hours that you were last night.
I'm like, oh my god.
Speaker 18 So thank you for just the patience of being able to get here. We just, we're so grateful.
Speaker 18 I think Chris and I both just wanted to come and make sure that we greet you guys, we meet you, give our contact information to you, and if there's anything that we could do.
Speaker 3 I have looked at the photos of this press conference so many times, zoomed in on every detail, just trying to make my brain take in this picture, this photo op, and everything that it means about America and about South Africa.
Speaker 3
Those two countries have always played off each other in my mind. My parents grew up in South Africa.
I grew up in America watching South Africa. It's where our family was.
Speaker 3 And South Africa has always been a symbol. In my lifetime, it was a global pariah, boycotted by everyone, and then apartheid fell, and South Africa became a model of justice and reconciliation.
Speaker 3 American leaders tripped over themselves to celebrate the new South Africa, practically deified Nelson Mandela.
Speaker 3 Photos of President Clinton applauding as Mandela and then President Clerk shook hands and Clinton, quote, thrilled at the peaceful election process and national unity.
Speaker 3 Photos of Mandela winning the Congressional Gold Medal, Newt Gingrich on one side, President Clinton on the other.
Speaker 3 America was eager to share in the symbolism of this new multiracial democracy because it added some nice shine to our own. Their story was our story, and their redemption, ours.
Speaker 3 Their success was ours too.
Speaker 3 Now, These photos of Afrikaner refugees in the Dulles airport. This is a new kind of symbolism, a new way for America to use South Africa to say something about ourselves.
Speaker 3
In these photos, South Africa is not an inspiring symbol of multiracial democracy anymore. That story is over.
The photos are like a reset. South Africa is a cautionary tale.
Speaker 3 It's a DEI nation, a place where white people can no longer be safe, where the tables have turned, where they've gone too far. This is where efforts toward equality lead us.
Speaker 3 A rainbow nation only ends in disaster.
Speaker 3 And the photo app communicates something else, too. It says, look, this is our new refugee policy.
Speaker 19 Well, because what's happening in South Africa fits the textbook definition of why the refugee program was created.
Speaker 3 Stephen Miller, presidential advisor, seems to be the guy coming up with our immigration policy.
Speaker 3 The Trump administration suspended refugee admissions to the United States. It was one of the president's first executive orders on his first day in office.
Speaker 3 Refugees waiting in camps all over the world, sometimes for generations, were cut off.
Speaker 3 Most refugees wait years for the chance to be vetted, to possibly get a chance to come to the United States. These South Africans arrived in three months.
Speaker 19 The refugee program is not intended as a solution for global poverty, and historically it has been used that way.
Speaker 3 This is not true. For instance, 12,000 refugees had already been approved to resettle in America when the Afrikaners arrived.
Speaker 3 They were approved, meaning they'd been through the security clearance, the health check, background check, interviews, and were arranging their travel to the U.S.
Speaker 3
Some of them already had flights booked. Those 12,000 people were approved not because they were fleeing poverty.
They were fleeing war, religious persecution, political persecution.
Speaker 3
Congolese families who fled to Rwanda after their neighbors were killed. Rohingya from Myanmar who were fleeing kidnappings, rape, and genocide.
Some Afghans who supported U.S.
Speaker 3 troops in America's war effort. Those people, Miller is saying, are not the textbook refugees.
Speaker 3 These are.
Speaker 3
After the photo op back in May, two different schools of thought emerged about what was going to happen next. This is a fancy way of saying Sam and I disagreed.
We are the schools of thought.
Speaker 3 I figured after seeing those photos and videos of the new South African refugees, I figured that's probably it for the whole alleged refugee program. It's pretty effective symbolism.
Speaker 3
I think they got what they wanted. The Trump administration has a lot of other goals to pursue.
They're not likely gonna bother building a whole program to bring over more people like Sam.
Speaker 3 Sam, back in South Africa, had gotten in her application for for resettlement to the US and was waiting with her thousands of Americaners.
Speaker 3 And she had a different thought.
Speaker 14 I have absolutely no doubt.
Speaker 3 Sam says she'd read everything everyone was saying. Everything, every person in the administration, adjacent to the administration.
Speaker 14 They're all very intent on, okay, well, this is just the pilot project. We're going to ramp things up now.
Speaker 14 I have no doubt that that's where it's going.
Speaker 3
She had no doubt. I had some doubt.
One of us was right.
Speaker 2
I'm Jeffy Walt. Coming up, secret moving companies and a joke about cars.
That's in a minute on Chicago Public Radio when our program continues.
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Speaker 2 This is American Life from Ira Glass. Today's program, winners! People who decide I can make this happen as the first step to making it happen.
Speaker 2 If you're just tuning in, we're in the middle of Hannah Jaffe Walt's story about Americaners, white South Africans who want to come to the United States as refugees.
Speaker 2 Where we left off, the United States had brought over a small group of 59 of them.
Speaker 2 And back in South Africa, Sam Biusa had organized thousands of others who were waiting, hoping the United States was about to ramp up a big program for them. Here's Hanna.
Speaker 3 From the moment the 59 South Africans landed in the U.S., Sam's life was transformed. She was inundated with phone calls, emails.
Speaker 14 I'm working 20-hour days, so I'm frazzled. So I'll try and focus.
Speaker 3 Everyone who had applied, but had not been included in that first small group that went to America wanted to know what this meant. Would they get a call soon? Had Americoners heard anything?
Speaker 3 Reporters wanted to know, what is Americoners? How many are you? Who are you? And Americans who saw the news on X or Ben Shapiro or Megan Kelly wanted to send their support.
Speaker 14 We've had actually had a fantastically loving response from America.
Speaker 14 In truth, I can't tell you how many hundreds and hundreds of Americans have reached out to us in our little group by email, on our X feeds, all over the place, coming forward, giving the most unbelievable testimony of how, you know, how excited they are to have us there and people offering help and not money, no, not at all.
Speaker 14 Nobody's exchanged a cent.
Speaker 3 Tell me about what are people saying and who are they?
Speaker 14 A lot of people just saying, hey, I'm in Alabama or I'm in Utah or whatever.
Speaker 14 I've got a farm here and I'd be happy to.
Speaker 14 I've got a cottage. If somebody wants to stay here for two months, I can give two months accommodation.
Speaker 14 Or there are people saying, hey, I've got a lot of contacts in business or I'm involved with the church or whatever.
Speaker 14
Whoever's coming to Florida, put them in touch with me. I've got lots of contacts.
I can probably hook them up.
Speaker 3 Sam responds to each person who reaches out and tells them, we don't have anyone for you yet, but as soon as they ramp up this program, we'll be in touch. Thank you so much.
Speaker 14 We are so excited to join your society. I can't explain.
Speaker 3 And then she puts their name, the state they're from, and contact information into a spreadsheet for the future. Sam said there were 70,000 people interested in going to America.
Speaker 14 Oh yeah, now we're all coming over.
Speaker 3 Yeah, we'll see you soon.
Speaker 13 Wow.
Speaker 14 On our way, around the corner.
Speaker 3 Maybe, but in the meantime, they were still living in South Africa.
Speaker 3 And their fellow countrymen also saw all the photos from Washington and the press conferences from the White House about persecution, targeting, and murder of white South Africans.
Speaker 3
South Africans were not, as a whole, happy about this. The government spent weeks weeks repeating, there is no persecution.
Crime in South Africa affects everyone, irrespective of race.
Speaker 3 South African president Sarah Ramapoza called the South Africans who left for the U.S. cowards.
Speaker 2 When you run away, you're a coward. And that's a real cowardly act.
Speaker 3 Which made news.
Speaker 16 Ramapoza claimed these individuals were unwilling to support the country's efforts to correct historic inequities left by a party.
Speaker 3 A populist political party made made a show of filing a criminal complaint against one of the Afrikaner lobbying groups, calling them treasonous for spreading lies to the United States in order to influence President Trump.
Speaker 3 Reactions from regular South Africans ranged from confusion, like this Afrikaner interviewed by Reuters.
Speaker 20 Why would you want to go?
Speaker 2 The people are getting on like normal?
Speaker 20 And,
Speaker 20 you know, what are you going to do over there?
Speaker 3 To mockery. Here's a white comedian on TikTok talking to a black comedian.
Speaker 21 I turned on the TV the other night and I hear from Donald Trump and Elon Musk that you've been planning a genocide.
Speaker 3 The black comedian sitting next to him says, oh yeah, we're killing every day.
Speaker 9 Like I was actually playing panel today and I thought to myself, goodness gracious, we are not killing fast enough.
Speaker 3 And there were lots of angry South Africans on social media.
Speaker 22
You are not refugees. You're not brave.
You're not victims.
Speaker 2 You're scared of a world where you don't get to be in charge.
Speaker 22 And that makes the rest of the Afrikaans community cringe.
Speaker 3 Trevor Noah, South Africa's own, on his podcast, asked his friend Eugene Coza about it.
Speaker 2 When was the first time you ever heard about white genocide in South Africa? It was this year. It was when everyone caught onto it.
Speaker 7
I almost felt like I was part of living in another country because I looked outside and I was like, that's crazy. Where is this thing happening? And I checked on my neighbor.
She was fine.
Speaker 3 The arrival of white South Africans in America was enough of a national spectacle, an in-joke, that some advertisers got in on it.
Speaker 3 For instance, a car commercial where a bunch of white men in Jeeps pull up outside a black man's house, wake him up, revving their engines.
Speaker 3 The man comes out of his house in his robe, saying, What's going on? And the white men yell, You haven't heard?
Speaker 2 You haven't heard.
Speaker 20 We've got radio jeep status by the
Speaker 14 hands!
Speaker 3 They rev the engines more. The black man walks over to one of them.
Speaker 20 Can I give it a go?
Speaker 2 No, apparently it's just for us.
Speaker 3 These jokes and comments,
Speaker 3 they were coming from people who all went through something together not that long ago.
Speaker 3 The end of apartheid, the transition to democracy, a process that was painstakingly designed to happen peacefully. To take white South Africans' worries into account and to keep them in the fold.
Speaker 3
Nobody gave up land or wealth. Nobody tore down institutions.
So much of that went unchanged.
Speaker 3 On Trevor Noah's podcast, his friend, comedian Eugene Coza, says the white refugee thing has him thinking back to that time after apartheid fell and how quickly black South Africans were asked to move to reconciliation.
Speaker 3 While white South Africans still held so much power over day-to-day life.
Speaker 7 We had to make nice very, very quickly. As soon as that ended, you had to be nice to the school governing body for your child to enter that school.
Speaker 7 You had to be nice to show that you're not like that kind of a crime in an estate, in a housing community, in a, you know, you had to, we had to be nice.
Speaker 7
So the ones that could played nice to be in those communities. The ones that couldn't afford played nice to work in those communities.
I think South Africa became
Speaker 7 a poster child for diplomacy. We almost had to, as a country, put our best foot forward.
Speaker 3 Everyone moves forward. That was the whole agreement of post-apartheid South Africa.
Speaker 3 The white people who used to have all the power and now only had some of the power would accept things and move forward.
Speaker 3 And black South Africans who used to have no power and now had a little more would agree to forgive the architects of apartheid and just move forward.
Speaker 3 Nobody looks back, nobody complains, we all just get on with building the country together.
Speaker 3 The white South Africans who wanted to be refugees in America, They were breaking that agreement.
Speaker 14 We're a very, very hated class in South Africa right now. Hated, hated, hated.
Speaker 3 Sam continued what she'd been doing, managing the Americaner site, preparing people, responding to questions.
Speaker 3 But Americaners were a thing now for everyone, from social media to moving companies, and not a positive thing.
Speaker 14 Okay, so people are going to want to
Speaker 14 send some boxes, you know, with granny's keepsakes in it and whatever. You know, they might leave their furniture behind, but most families will want to take a box or two.
Speaker 14 So i set out to speak to all the removals companies that can do international removals to america in south africa
Speaker 14 strangely enough which actually shocked me quite a few of them said oh i don't want anything to do with you refugees put the phone down in my ear and even wait sam had you experienced that before like was that shocking to you totally yeah it's almost like we're sort of second-class citizens now or something like that.
Speaker 14 Anyway, so,
Speaker 14 or that they don't want to be seen by the people who are staying to be supportive of the refugee program.
Speaker 14 And those that wanted to help also didn't want their logos anywhere
Speaker 14 publicly because they thought they would be subject to attack.
Speaker 14 So
Speaker 14 I couldn't advertise somebody's company on my website and say, hey, these guys will offer a good deal and show a banner with their logo on it.
Speaker 3 So she figured out a workaround. On her website, Sam put a tab called packing up an essay.
Speaker 14 On the right-hand side of that page, I have a little form. So you can put your info in as a refugee.
Speaker 14 And then there are
Speaker 14 secret people that are that like the refugees that are willing to help them in the background that get an email when you fill in that form. They privately quote the refugee on transporting goods.
Speaker 14
So I've got this like secret intro service. We don't charge for it at all whatsoever, but it's kind of like an underground thing.
So, we've got that for all sorts of services, like you know,
Speaker 14 financial advice for
Speaker 14 people needing to get their pension money out of the country and that kind of thing. We've got it for we're doing, we're busy with selling cars now.
Speaker 14 If you're putting the property on the market, but yeah, we're not very well liked, so
Speaker 14 it's so ironic.
Speaker 14 If we weren't persecuted before, we certainly are now.
Speaker 14 So it's almost like a self-fulfilling prophecy. Extend the executive order, extend the offer for refugee program, and then also spark
Speaker 14 a bit of a race war as a result.
Speaker 3 Did you feel like identified with other white people in South Africa in this way before?
Speaker 14 No, no, no, this is a completely new phenomenon for all of us.
Speaker 14
I don't think a group has ever been so tight-knit as this group is in this country ever. In fact, I think it's akin to your MAGA on a very tiny scale.
You know, that feeling of...
Speaker 14 those people that group together and would have TPUSA and all those sort of things going on and they would all flock to the rallies and whatever and that vibe is that spark of excitement.
Speaker 14 Well, we've got the same thing going on here on a much smaller scale. It's actually quite sweet.
Speaker 3 I'd been focused on whether large numbers of South Africans would be allowed to come to the U.S.
Speaker 3 I hadn't imagined just how much the possibility of them coming here would change their lives, even if they never left.
Speaker 14 I've made so many new friends.
Speaker 14
So many new friends. 18 hours a day, seven days a week.
I live, eat, sleep, and breathe what's going on here.
Speaker 3 Do you feel like it's a big part of your identity now that you're an Americaner or that you're part of this group that's eligible for this program?
Speaker 14
Totally. I'm loving it.
I'll be honest, it's given me a newfound purpose. I feel very
Speaker 14 honored and privileged to have made a difference. You know, it's like you take something on and it actually works.
Speaker 3
A few weeks ago, seven months after the executive order, I got a text from Sam. I can't chat to anyone in the media at the moment.
I went to the AmeriConnors website and it had changed.
Speaker 3
It now said, AmeriConnors is an official referral partner for the U.S. Refugees Admissions Program.
Sam couldn't talk to me anymore because she was now officially working with the U.S.
Speaker 3
State Department. Americaners, this group she had invented, was helping the U.S.
government identify eligible refugees to the United States. Sam was right and I was wrong.
Speaker 3
The U.S. government is processing refugee applicants in Pretoria right now at record speeds.
I'm hearing people are being processed within weeks.
Speaker 3 Everything about the way the program is structured, it's the way Sam imagined it would go. To qualify, you do not need to be Afrikaner.
Speaker 3 You have to be from a racial minority population in South Africa, i.e., everyone except black people. You do not need to provide documentation of past persecution.
Speaker 3 The chant, kill the boar, qualifies as credible fear of future persecution.
Speaker 3 And you do not have to flee as other refugees do. You can be processed for resettlement from your home.
Speaker 3
I haven't talked to Sam in a while now. I'm not even sure where she is.
Is she here or there?
Speaker 3 I do know from talking to her before a little bit about what she pictures her life here will be like.
Speaker 3 Where in the states will you go? Do you know?
Speaker 14 Well, you know, we're not sure where we would initially be
Speaker 14 relocated to, but I'm keen on North Carolina myself.
Speaker 14 why where are you based in new york i don't know i've got this parchment for mountains and i'm thinking if i go way into western north carolina i'm sure where that's the appalations and
Speaker 14 i'm thinking that'll suit
Speaker 14 so if i sell my little household goodies and my car and my whatever um
Speaker 14 you know i'm going to go with this tiny wallet with a few dollars in it and and then it's then we hit the ground running we've got to get ourselves working and doing all sorts of amazing things to earn a living when we get there, you know?
Speaker 14 So we'll do that as a team, me and my boys.
Speaker 3
A new American archetype. I think about Sam Busa this way now.
And I think of her often. Every week, every few days, the president puts out a big declaration.
Speaker 3 a broad intention of things he'd like to see in the world. An executive order on paper straws or a rant against Tylenol, the Riviera of the Middle East.
Speaker 3 And it becomes the job of the people who work for the president to figure out the practical details of if and how these things could actually happen.
Speaker 3 But then there are also people like Sam, an ordinary person who's not in the government, but who is tireless, skilled, and paying attention.
Speaker 3 Someone with the confidence to say, I think this is what you mean here, right?
Speaker 3
When the administration issued this executive order in February, this wasn't the plan. They didn't know Sam was out there.
She didn't know they were going to do this.
Speaker 3 But once the opportunity existed, there was Sam, willing to work with what was there to make this a reality, to turn it into a win.
Speaker 2 Hana Jaffe Waltz, one of the producers of our show, Nancy Opdike, edited her story.
Speaker 2 Just this week, the Trump administration published its official number of how many refugees the United States is going to take in the next year. The number is 7,500, a record low.
Speaker 2 And usually, that number is for people from all over the world. This year, it'll mostly just be South Africans.
Speaker 2 Moving,
Speaker 2 it's moving me up.
Speaker 3 Every step is moving me up.
Speaker 2 Royal program was produced today by Nancy Updike, Diane Wu, and Hana Jaffe Walt.
Speaker 2 The people who put together today's show include Fia Bennon, Michael Kamate, Aviva DeKornfeld, Suzanne Gabber, Sophie Gill, Catherine Raymondo, Stone Nelson, Nadia Raymond, Ryan Rummery, Frances Swanson, Christopher Swatala, and Julie Whitaker.
Speaker 2 Our managing editor, Sarah Abduraman, our senior editor is David Kestenbaum. Our executive editor is Emmanuel Berry.
Speaker 2 Special thanks today to Adrian Allman, Angel Hurd, Lynnasia Krud, Deandra Norman, John Nelson, Sandile Swanee, Timothy Young, and International Refuge, Chris George, Brian Kahn, Sarah Jaffe, and Geraldine Eiffel.
Speaker 2 This American Life is delivered to public radio stations by PRX, the Public Radio Exchange.
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Speaker 2 Do it for the stuff stuff you get, or do it simply because you want us to be able to keep making the show. Join at thisamericanlife.org slash life partners.
Speaker 2 Thanks this week to Life Partners Roland Moore, Mark Kim, Christine Woodhouse, and Ross Boucher.
Speaker 2 Thanks as always to our program's co-founder, Mr. Tori Malatia, who for some reason always gets lots of questions from people this time of year about trick-or-treating.
Speaker 14 I'm 56, aren't I too old? Or, you know, am I allowed to bring my dogs?
Speaker 2 I ran her glass. Back next week with more stories of this American wife.
Speaker 3 Each step is moving, it's moving me up.
Speaker 3 Moving,
Speaker 3 it's moving me up.
Speaker 3 Every step is moving me up.
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