Subhead: Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration.
Africa
How China is filling weapons supply gap in Africa’s Sahel left by France and Russia
Framed as opportunism, China’s arms deals in the Sahel actually reflect a deeper shift: the collapse of French neocolonial control and the search for sovereign alternatives. While the West exported war to preserve empire, China engages within a multipolar framework—on terms defined by African states, not imperial masters.
Robotic innovations in African agriculture: A new frontier
The mechanization of agriculture in Africa, under the guise of innovation, often masks the displacement of peasant labor. As robots till the land, the question arises: who truly reaps the benefits? The Digerati’s solution to food insecurity seems to sideline the very hands that have fed nations for generations.
ICJ hears Sudan case accusing UAE of complicity in genocide
The courtroom becomes a theater where imperial actors feign innocence. The UAE’s alleged involvement in Sudan’s turmoil is a stark reminder that in the age of hyper-imperialism, statecraft often involves clandestine support for chaos, all while maintaining a façade of diplomacy.
Asia
Southeast Asia’s quiet revolt against the dollar: Should the US be worried?
The dollar’s dominance faces subtle yet significant challenges as Southeast Asian nations explore alternatives. This monetary shift isn’t just economic; it’s a form of resistance against the financial hegemony that has long dictated the region’s economic policies.
‘Stabiliser’: Why Japan is the most trusted power in Southeast Asia
Japan’s image as a stabilizing force belies its strategic interests. Trust, in this context, is cultivated through economic entanglements and soft power, ensuring that the region remains within the orbit of capitalist democracies aligned against emerging multipolarity.
India-China ties under strain amid Trump’s foreign policy shifts
The subcontinent becomes a chessboard where the moves of distant powers dictate local tensions. As the U.S. recalibrates its alliances, India and China find themselves reacting to external provocations, highlighting how regional dynamics are often puppeteered by global hegemonies.
Middle East
Iran says progress in nuclear talks with US, confirms third round next week
Diplomatic engagements over nuclear capabilities are less about non-proliferation and more about maintaining a balance of terror that benefits established powers. Iran’s negotiations reflect a desire to assert sovereignty in a world where such autonomy is often punished.
Armed illegal Israeli settlers storm West Bank village, damage Palestinian property
Settler violence, often under the watchful eye of state forces, exemplifies the colonial contradictions inherent in occupation. The destruction of Palestinian homes isn’t just about land; it’s about erasing a people’s presence and rights through sanctioned aggression.
Turkey’s strategic tangle: Navigating alliances and regional ambitions
Turkey’s geopolitical maneuvers reveal the complexities of a nation striving for regional dominance while tethered to global power structures. Its oscillation between East and West underscores the challenges of asserting independence in a world of entangled alliances.
Latin America & the Caribbean
U.S. accelerates deportations of Venezuelans without judicial safeguards, labeled as ‘enemy aliens’
The resurrection of archaic laws to justify modern deportations illustrates how legal frameworks are manipulated to serve xenophobic agendas. Labeling migrants as ‘enemy aliens’ demonstrates the colonial logic at the heart of U.S. immigration policy: dehumanize the victims of your imperial devastation, then criminalize their survival.
Nicaragua expresses support for Ecuador’s candidate Luisa González after alleged electoral fraud
The Bolivarian bloc continues to close ranks as electoral manipulation resurfaces in Ecuador. Washington’s fingerprints are never far behind, revealing again how democracy is a tactic, not a principle, in U.S. imperial strategy across Latin America.
Betting on Brazil’s economic collapse is a mistake
The Financial Times is sweating—not because Brazil’s poor are suffering, but because the markets aren’t getting their way. Lula raises the income tax threshold so working people can breathe, and suddenly it’s a crisis. The FT calls for “fiscal responsibility,” but what they mean is: cut social spending, sell off the commons, and hand the country back to the financiers. They drool over Tarcísio de Freitas, a slick Bolsonaro-adjacent technocrat who speaks the language of privatization and capital discipline. What they really want isn’t a stable Brazil—it’s a compliant one. A Brazil that stops feeding its own people and starts feeding profit margins. They don’t fear collapse—they fear resistance.
Europe
France’s president says making Haiti pay for its independence was unjust
Macron admits what Haiti’s been saying for 200 years—that France robbed the world’s first Black republic for daring to be free. But words cost nothing. France built its wealth on Haiti’s debt, and now offers a commission instead of reparations. While they “reflect,” Haiti bleeds—still punished for its revolution, still trapped by the same imperial system that billed them for their own liberation.
Macron invites international scientists to ‘flee repression’ and work in France
France brands itself a sanctuary for science while policing its own suburbs like occupied zones. The invitation to exiled brainpower is less about liberty and more about consolidating Euro-technocratic supremacy in the face of a shifting global order.
U.S. outlines ‘durable peace’ for Ukraine, Russia, and Europe
Peace, in the American lexicon, means the continuation of war by diplomatic means. What the U.S. offers Ukraine is not autonomy, but entrenchment as a NATO buffer zone—fuel for the military-industrial complex and a human shield for declining Western dominance.
North America
Tech giants lead data center expansion across North America
The empire’s fortresses are no longer concrete bunkers but temperature-controlled server farms. Big Tech builds its citadels of control under the banner of innovation, while energy-intensive data centers suck life from the land and labor from the working class. Digital feudalism is not on the horizon—it’s under construction.
Mark Carney unveils plan to ‘Trump-proof’ Canada
Carney’s liberal technocracy aims to insulate the Canadian economy from Trumpian chaos. But behind the curtain lies the same system: monopoly finance capital cloaked in progressive rhetoric, reinforcing settler capitalist hegemony with a slightly nicer font.
Mexico’s Sheinbaum counters Trump deportations with jobs for returnees
In the face of Trump’s settler-state purges, Sheinbaum mobilizes labor nationalism as a defense strategy. But the border remains imperialism’s scar, and every deportation is a reminder that the freedom to migrate still bows to colonial divisions of labor and value.
United States
Trump funding freeze upends agricultural research at U.S. universities
What use is agricultural science to a regime that feeds on chaos? Trump’s freeze isn’t fiscal prudence—it’s scorched-earth technofascism, dismantling public knowledge systems while handing food security over to Monsanto and friends. This is not austerity; it’s sabotage in service of monopoly capital.
U.S. historians debate 250th anniversary of Lexington and Concord
The mythology of 1776 is once again deployed to sanctify settler rule. As historians split hairs over gunshots and parchment, the real war for independence—of the oppressed from the empire within—remains censored. The American Revolution birthed a slaveholding republic, not a democracy.
Oklahoma City bombing remembered on 30th anniversary
Three decades later, the bomb that shattered Oklahoma City still echoes. But the media memorializes without interrogating the deeper currents of white settler rage, anti-government extremism, and the contradictions of empire imploding. Domestic terror was not an aberration—it was a warning shot from the fringes of fascism’s future base.
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