The 2026 NDS turns imperial storytelling into imperial workflow. The Western Hemisphere is redesigned as warfighting rear-base and corridor system. Denial becomes the empire’s default form of power under constraint. Simultaneity panic fuses alliances, industry, and border militarization into one war-state machine.By:Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 27, 2026When Doctrine Stops Explaining and Starts... Continue Reading →
Capital’s Emergency Exit: Michael Parenti, Fascism, and the War on Class Memory
Fascism is not an aberration but a rational instrument deployed when capital loses democratic control. Socialist revolutions expanded freedom for the many and were met with siege, sabotage, and counterrevolution. The restoration of capitalism in the East revealed the market as a system of plunder, repression, and social decay. Anti-communism and class denial function as... Continue Reading →
The Great Lecture Hall and the Small Seminar Room: Michael Parenti Vs. Western Marxism
A tribute to Michael Parenti that situates his life’s work as a living challenge to the academic drift and political retreat of Western Marxism. This essay traces Parenti’s unified analysis of class power, empire, media, ideology, and anti-communism, arguing that his legacy is not a memory to be curated but a method to be used... Continue Reading →
Taking the Sign Out of the Window: Mark Carney, Middle Powers, and the Managed Truth of a Fortifying World
At Davos 2026, Canada’s prime minister declares the rules-based order dead and urges “honesty” about power. But beneath the rhetoric of truth lies a disciplined strategy for stabilizing imperial hierarchy, fortifying the middle powers, and managing decline without rupture. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 24, 2026When the Lie Stops Paying the Rent... Continue Reading →
Author, Authority, and Empire: How “Authoritarian” Became Political Science’s Favorite Weapon Against Mass Power
This essay is part of Weaponized Information’s larger project to forge a new discipline of political science—one that treats politics as the scientific study of power: how it is accumulated, organized, enforced, and resisted. In “Towards a New Political Science: Politics as the Science of Power”, we broke with procedural political science and its canon... Continue Reading →
History as Weapon: Walter Rodney and the Discipline of Revolutionary Marxism
A Weaponized Intellects reconstruction of A History of the Guyanese Working People, 1881–1905 that treats Rodney’s most mature historical materialist work not as scholarship for contemplation, but as theory forged for organization, struggle, and socialist revolution. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Weaponized Intellects Book Review | January 23, 2026A Book Written to Be... Continue Reading →
Influence Without Empire: How China’s Infrastructure Exposes the Crisis of Imperial Narratives in Central Asia
A wire story turns development into suspicion by replacing politics with the language of “influence.”The facts reveal a region actively recalibrating after decades of imposed dependency and underdevelopment.Beneath the headlines lies a global shift where infrastructure collides with imperial decline and class struggle.The task ahead is to organize solidarity so this opening leads to sovereignty,... Continue Reading →
Lutnick, Carney, and the Politics of Permission: How USMCA Discipline Turns Trade Into Obedience
A U.S. trade official scolds Canada for stepping outside its assigned lane, revealing how power speaks through “commentary.” The facts show a bounded policy shift unfolding inside an unstable trade and industrial landscape the story refuses to name. Placed in historical and imperial context, the outrage reads less as economics than as enforcement of hierarchy... Continue Reading →
Trump, the Plutocrats, and the Scrap Heap of Democracy: Technofascism and the Breaking of the Settler Deal
This essay shows how liberal media turns raw power into a moral drama and calls it analysis. It lays out the hard record beneath the story—colonial foundations, security buildup, and institutional force. It names Trump 2.0 for what it is: a technofascist turn driven by imperial decline and class retreat. It argues that when consent... Continue Reading →
When Empire Smiles, Check Your Pockets: The Myth of a Trump–Rodríguez “Reset”
CNN wants the reader to see a new partnership forming in Caracas: a phone call, oil talk, CIA photo-ops, deportations back on schedule. But under siege, smiles are signals—and “warming relations” often means the empire believes it has found a manager, not a partner. We excavate the story’s framing and then trace the concrete leverage... Continue Reading →