Bring Me My Machine Gun

Bring Me My Machine Gun is the Propaganda song sung by Jacob Zuma, a black thief, Rapist & president of South Africa, who is currently, in April 2016 perverting its Constitution.

The Wiki tells us that this song is quote a controversial Zulu language struggle song unquote but not why. Indeed it manages to explain it without once using the word Racism but it does gives the words. Presumably the  Wiki feels that inciting mass murder, Ethnic Cleansing & Genocide is all right - if the perpetrator is not a White Man.

The Wikipedia is just as corrupt, just as much as Propaganda machine as the rest of the Main Stream Media.

Bring Me My Machine Gun ex Wiki [ to kill nasty White Man with ]
Umshini wami", also known as "Awuleth' Umshini Wami" (English, Bring me my machine gun), is a controversial Zulu language struggle song used formerly by members of Umkhonto we Sizwe, the military wing of the African National Congress during the struggle against Apartheid in South Africa with machine allegedly [ sic ] referencing machine gun. Nowhere in the song is the term "machine gun" used, but the reference is strong. Most recently, the song is identified with the persona of Jacob Zuma, the current President of South Africa, and is often sung at rallies which involve him and his supporters, including the ANC Youth League.

Lyrics
Zulu English
Umshini wami mshini wami (lead)
khawuleth'umshini wami (Follower)
Umshini wami mshini wami,
khawuleth'umshini wami
Umshini wami mshini wami,
khawuleth'umshini wami
khawuleth'umshini wami
Wen'uyang'ibambezela(Lead)
umshini wami, khawuleth'umshini wami(Follower)
My machine my machine
Please bring my machine
My machine my machine
Please bring my machine
My machine my machine
Please bring my machine
Please bring my machine
You're pulling me back
My machine, Please bring my machine [1]
Popularity and controversy
In October 2006, the song was made available by Zuma's defence fund as a ringtone on its website.[2] The song has gained controversy in 21st-century South Africa because of its association with the violence of the Apartheid period, and is seen as misplaced by some people because of the rise in violent crime throughout the country since the current multiracial order began in 1994. In 2008, Zuma expressed displeasure when the song was sung by violent, xenophobic mobs.[3][ But carried on using it in 2009 - see #Mandela smiles as Zuma calls for his machine gun ] In 2011 Die Antwoord released a short film titled Umshini Wam, that was written and directed by Harmony Korine, who also wrote the screenplay for Larry Clark's feature film Kids. The 16-minute short features Ninja and Yo-Landi Visser of Die Antwoord as a disabled couple who are passionate fans of "gangsta rap" and use wheelchairs for mobility.[4]

Umdzidzi wami
Since the Jacob Zuma rape trial, several more versions of this song have been made. Some of the versions contain lyrics of a satirical nature, such as a remix of the song by See4, in which the song refers to a microphone instead of a machine gun. The song is sung in Swati language and is called "Umdzidzi wami" ("Bring my buttocks/ass"), or "Khawuleth umdzidzi wami".

South African President Is A Black Racist Thief [ 3 April 2016 ]
QUOTE
President Jacob Zuma is happiest when leading crowds of faithful followers in a song of his own composition dating from the struggle against apartheid called Bring Me My Machine Gun [ to kill nasty White Man with ]...........

 He was deeply unhappy on Friday night when he found himself apologising on television for having broken South Africa’s constitution.......

Make no mistake: the denouement of the long-running scandal known to all South Africans as “Nkandla” could herald the downfall of Mr Zuma. Nkandla is the president’s private estate in his home province of KwaZulu-Natal. From 2009 onwards, £13 million of public money was spent on providing Nkandla with features that Zulu chiefs like Mr Zuma consider essential, including a new cattle kraal, chicken run, amphitheatre and – more mundanely – a swimming pool. After this was exposed, the official charged with rooting out corruption, known as the “Public Protector”, issued a scathing report and ordered Mr Zuma to repay the money. At first, he refused.......

Even before he won the presidency in 2009, Mr Zuma faced no less than 783 charges of alleged corruption, fraud and racketeering. All of these accusations were dropped on procedural grounds [ The procedure was to corrupt the prosecution ].
UNQUOTE
South Africa is reverting to the Stone Age. In fact it will not quite get there because the Jews running the South African Communist Party, the ones who used Nelson Mandela to take over the government will stop it happening. South Africa has a Zionist Occupation Government [ ZOG ] working through black front men. Jews run gold mining through De Beers. They are greedy. They want black labourers and some white men to actually run things.

 

Mandela smiles as Zuma calls for his machine gun - Telegraph [ 20 April 2009 ]
QUOTE
Mandela smiles as Zuma calls for his machine gun
Watched by a smiling Nelson Mandela and the anti-apartheid icon's ex-wife Winnie, Jacob Zuma raised his fist in the air and launched into his campaign anthem. "Umshini wami, umshini wami," chanted the African National Congress leader, accompanied by more than 50,000 delirious supporters packing Ellis Park stadium in Johannesburg to the rafters -"Bring me my machine gun".

The rally was the final campaign event for South Africa's ruling party ahead of the general election this week, which it is certain to win.

Politically, it was spectacular, and not only because of the numbers present and the helicopters in party colours flying overhead.

In a show of unity and mutual support, Mr Zuma had his arm around Mr Mandela, who is 90 and increasingly frail, as he helped him up to and down from the platform on the middle of the rugby pitch.

To have Mr Mandela – who has long reiterated that he has retired from politics – Winnie Madikizela-Mandela and Mr Zuma on the same stage was a stunning coup for the ANC.

Gathered together in one spot were the older generation of the party and its current luminaries, although Thabo Mbeki, the former president ousted after Mr Zuma took over the party leadership, was conspicuous by his absence.

In their first public appearance together for years after a bitter divorce, the Mandelas greeted each other warmly, sat next to each other on a couch on the platform and then rarely looked at each other.

It is Mr Mandela's loyalty to the ANC which brought him to the event, despite the multiple scandals that have surrounded Mr Zuma, 67.

A traditionalist Zulu polygamist, the politician has been acquitted of rape and twice had corruption charges against him dropped on legal technicalities, leaving the way clear for his inauguration as head of state after the elections.

Mr Zuma has built his appeal on "pro-poor" policies and has won the support of Mrs Madikizela-Mandela, who despite her convictions for fraud and her alleged role in the kidnapping of Stompie Moeketsi, a 14-year-old activist murdered in 1989, remains popular among South Africa's most poverty-stricken people.

In keeping with that image, she wore a black beret adorned with a Communist star and a T-shirt showing Chris Hani, the assassinated leader of the South African Communist Party.

Mr Zuma is even more controversial than she is, but his defenders point to his popularity – "Zuma is like Jesus" read one poster in the crowd – and his reputation as a conciliator.

Mr Mandela – usually referred to affectionately as 'Madiba', his clan name – built his status on his efforts to create what he called a "rainbow nation" in South Africa, forgiving his former captors and ensuring a relatively peaceful transition to majority rule.

Nonetheless Mr Zuma did not strike a unifying tone at the rally, itself dubbed 'Siyanqoba' or 'We are the conquerors'.

Instead, while he proclaimed that "South Africa belongs to all of us, black and white," he chose to issue an uncompromising message.

"The judiciary is expected to undergo transformation," he said – code for the replacement of the largely white upper levels of South Africa's judges with those who are more representative of the majority- black population.

Given Mr Zuma's past legal problems, and the thinly-veiled threats that his supporters made against judges ahead of key decisions, his words will reignite concerns about the rule of law under the ANC – opposition parties have long accused the organisation of trying to put itself and its leader above the law.

With the key question on the vote being whether the ANC retains its two-thirds majority, which allows it to change the constitution, Mr Zuma said: "There is nothing in the constitution that says a massive majority for the ruling party is bad for democracy, especially a party that has a track record of upholding the constitution like the ANC."

Afterwards party supporters were ecstatic. "He's a real icon," said Xolani Madoda, 27, from Klerksdorp, of Mr Mandela. "He really loves the ANC. He's the reason we are here, he reminds us of the times we have come from. Today I'm happy, everything is perfect thanks to the ANC. Jacob Zuma is going to be the president."

www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianoce... Proxy  Highlight

20 Apr 2009 ... Mandela smiles as Zuma calls for his machine gun ... packing Ellis Park stadium in Johannesburg to the rafters -"Bring me my machine gun".
Jacob Zuma: Get Me My Machine Gun | - The Right Perspective

UNQUOTE
Racism is fine when it is anti-English or anti-white. NB Zionist crazies control the place.