Axel Springer, the Africa Finance Corporation, and the Vault: Gold, Monetary Anxiety, and the Battle Over Who Controls the Chain

A trillion dollars in untapped gold is sold as opportunity in an age of financial instability. The numbers glitter, but the narrative abstracts extraction from labor, land, and history. Reserve accumulation rises alongside illicit outflows, smuggling networks, and toxic exposure. The real struggle is not over gold in the vault, but over who governs the... Continue Reading →

Carney, NATO, and the War Contractors: How Canada’s “Sovereignty” Pivot Deepens the Military Bloc

The New York Times sells a procurement shift as national independence. The numbers reveal a structural escalation anchored in NATO and continental integration. The pivot redistributes contracts while entrenching a war-oriented political economy. Workers and movements face a choice: defend the arms budget or reorganize production itself.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 16,... Continue Reading →

Cedric J. Robinson, Black Marxism and the Colonial Blindspot Inside Western Marxism

Black Marxism and the Colonial Blindspot Inside Western Marxism Cedric J. Robinson did not write Black Marxism to abandon Marxism, but to indict the version of it that emerged safely inside empire. By tracing capitalism’s formation through slavery, racial domination, and colonial war, Robinson forces historical materialism to confront what Western Marxism systematically erased. The... Continue Reading →

Cathedrals and Carriers: Marco Rubio’s Civilizational Manifesto for a New Western Century

In Munich, the language of heritage, sovereignty, and renewal cloaks a program of bloc consolidation, industrial recalibration, hardened borders, and unilateral force. Beneath the hymn to Western civilization lies a disciplined strategy to reassert Atlantic primacy in a multipolar world. The question is not whether the West will act — but who benefits from how... Continue Reading →

Claudia Jones vs. Empire: Black Communism, White Supremacy, and the War on the Most Exploited

The daughter of Caribbean labor radicalism enters the furnace of U.S. racial capitalism. The Communist Party becomes a battlefield over race, class, and the super-exploitation of Black women. McCarthyism criminalizes Black internationalism and deports a revolutionary. Exile in Britain transforms repression into new insurgent possibility. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black History Matters... Continue Reading →

Empire Recruits, China Consolidates: The CIA Video and the Crisis of Unipolar Power

A CIA recruitment campaign is framed as opportunity while containment intensifies. Behind the video lies a shattered U.S. intelligence network and a decade of Chinese military reform. Export controls and Indo-Pacific encirclement reveal a deeper structural recalibration. As multipolarity widens the field, the real struggle is over who shapes the emerging order.By: Prince Kapone |... Continue Reading →

“We Don’t Please East or West”: African Sovereignty Speaks While the Rules-Based Order Breaks

At a summit built to “shape future governments,” African heads of state confront old imperial binaries inside a new architecture of power. Tucker Carlson presses the familiar frames—China versus the West, democracy as sermon, race as property—while sanctions, AI infrastructure, and development finance reveal the harder machinery beneath the talk. Zimbabwe’s discipline, Sierra Leone’s education... Continue Reading →

The K They Drew, The System They Hid: Confidence, Concentration, and the Architecture of a Split Economy

Wall Street calls it sentiment. Corporate media calls it divergence. But beneath the alphabet metaphors lies a decades-long transfer of wealth, power, and sovereignty from labor to capital. The numbers do not describe a mood swing. They describe a system working exactly as designed. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 11, 2026 When... Continue Reading →

W.E.B. Du Bois and the Long Arc of Radicalization

From Talented Tenth Idealism to Communist Internationalism, Du Bois’s Life Exposes the Color Line as a Global System, White Labor’s Imperial Bargain, Reconstruction as Crushed Revolution, and the Unfinished Struggle Against Colonial Capitalism.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black History Matters Series | February 11, 2026I. A Child of Emancipation, Raised in the Shadow... Continue Reading →

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