This review excavates “The Modern Prince” as Gramsci’s prison-forged answer to the West’s revolutionary stall: why fortified capitalism survives crisis through consent, institutions, and “common sense.” It reconstructs his core strategic arsenal—collective will, hegemony, war of position, and the party as the organized brain of the oppressed—against the fantasies of spontaneity and the dead-end of... Continue Reading →
One Nation Under Hostage: The Epstein Archive and the Anatomy of Elite Power
Whitney Webb did not write a book about a scandal. She wrote about a system. In Volume I, she traces blackmail from the Cold War’s underbelly into the bloodstream of U.S. empire, showing how intelligence agencies, financiers, and organized crime learned to discipline one another through leverage instead of law. In Volume II, Jeffrey Epstein... Continue Reading →
Burkina Faso, Ghana, and Business Insider Africa: Corridor Cooperation in the Shadow of Uneven Sovereignty
Business Insider Africa frames the Ghana–Burkina agreements as a pragmatic security and trade reset, and we begin by excavating how that cooperation is narrated. We then map the documented terrain beneath the headline: ECOWAS rupture, AES consolidation, French military withdrawal, AFRICOM continuity, gold extraction circuits, CFA monetary tether, IMF discipline, and multipolar infrastructure competition. From... Continue Reading →
The BBC, Zelensky and the Price of Primacy: When Hegemony Calls Itself Defense
This essay excavates the BBC’s framing of the Ukraine war to reveal how catastrophe rhetoric and moral personalization manufacture consent. It reconstructs the documented record—NATO expansion, U.S. strategic doctrine, Minsk diplomacy, sanctions, and militarization—to widen the frame beyond headline urgency. It then situates the conflict within the deeper contradiction between imperial hegemony and national sovereignty,... Continue Reading →
Bernal vs. The Aryan Machine: How European Empire Whitened Greece and Called It Civilization
In this Weaponized Intellects book review of Black Athena (Vol. 1), we follow Martin Bernal’s argument that Greece was cut off from its Afroasiatic roots at the very moment Europe was rising to imperial power. We trace how the Ancient Model of Mediterranean entanglement was pushed aside and replaced by the Aryan Model, then cemented... Continue Reading →
White Guilt or White Pride? The False Choice That Preserves Empire
“White guilt” shrinks a global system of power into a private mood. Liberal confession mourns history while preserving the machinery of dominance. Reactionary pride weaponizes heritage to harden bloc discipline under multipolar pressure. Beyond shame and nostalgia lies defection from empire and alignment with global liberation.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 20, 2026History... Continue Reading →
Marx’s Grundrisse: Capital’s Global Empire, Labor’s Stolen Time, and the Crisis It Cannot Escape
Marx dismantles liberal political economy and rebuilds the totality from production outward. Exchange and money reveal separation as the architecture of domination. Machinery and the general intellect expose capital’s war against its own measure of value. The world market universalizes crisis while pointing beyond labor time toward free development. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information... Continue Reading →
Berlin’s Boardrooms, NATO’s Generals, and Beijing’s Factories: Germany’s Trade Deficit and the Crisis of Imperial Supremacy
A romance metaphor conceals structural strain. The trade ledger exposes export contraction and rising militarization. Industrial rivalry is recoded as security doctrine. Workers and colonized nations confront the costs—and the opening.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 19, 2026When the Empire Calls It Heartbreak Our excavation begins with a February 19, 2026 piece from... Continue Reading →
Booming Balance Sheets, Breaking Backs: CNBC, Monopoly Capital, and the “Boomcession” Lie
Booming Balance Sheets, Breaking Backs: CNBC, Monopoly Capital, and the “Boomcession” LieSubhead:Corporate media reframes structural exploitation as a quirky economic paradox.The data reveal a class regime where profits surge while labor absorbs risk.Debt, housing, and hiring slowdowns expose how growth is captured upward and insecurity pushed downward.From tenant unions to debtors’ assemblies, working people are... Continue Reading →
Empire vs. Sekou Odinga: Counterinsurgency, Community Power, and the War for Black Liberation (1944–2024)
Jamaica, Queens forged a revolutionary in the shadow of Malcolm X. The Black Panther Party built dual power — and the state answered with disruption. Underground struggle met federal conspiracy and thirty-three years of captivity. Elderhood returned him to a new generation still facing the same empire. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black... Continue Reading →