By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information "The fascist must expand to live. Consequently he has to control the world's resources and markets, and he can permit no internal opposition." —George Jackson, Blood In My Eye When George Jackson wrote Blood In My Eye, he wasn’t speculating about the future. He was reporting from the front... Continue Reading →
George Jackson – The People’s General Behind Bars
“Settle your quarrels, come together, understand the reality of our situation, understand that fascism is already here.” — George Jackson The People's General Behind Bars George Jackson didn’t go to Harvard. He didn’t sit on a nonprofit board. He wasn’t part of any liberal coalition that promised change and delivered nothing. He was a prisoner... Continue Reading →
Part II: Neocolonial Sabotage and the Genocidal Present
Weaponized Information | By Price Kapone Empire Doesn’t Leave—It Evolves When the British packed up their flags in 1956, they didn’t really leave Sudan. They just swapped out uniforms. Instead of redcoats, we got generals in tailored suits. Instead of the Crown, we got the IMF. Instead of Maxim guns, we got NGO peacekeepers, oil... Continue Reading →
Part I: Sudan and the Colonial Origins of a Manufactured Crisis
Weaponized Information | By Prince Kapone This Was No Accident They want us to believe Sudan is a mess of its own making. That it's all about tribes, religion, and "ancient hatreds." That the chaos is natural, inevitable, and internal. But pull back the curtain, and you'll see something else entirely: a country deliberately broken... Continue Reading →
Between the Dragon and the Dollar: China’s Resource Dependency and the Struggle for African Liberation
China needs what Africa has. The U.S. wants to stop it from getting it. But beneath the geopolitical chess match lies a deeper question: who do Africa's resources serve—foreign capital or the African people? I. The Empire Is Cracking, But the Scramble Ain’t Over Africa’s soil has always attracted foreign boots, bankers, and businessmen. The... Continue Reading →
Huey Was No Gangster: Dual Power and the Science of Revolution in the Heart of Empire
The Most Dangerous Man in America“We do not fight racism with racism. We fight racism with solidarity. We do not fight capitalism with Black capitalism. We fight capitalism with socialism.” — Fred HamptonTo the FBI, Huey P. Newton was the most dangerous man in America. Not because he had an army. Not because he had... Continue Reading →
Ben Barka Was No Traitor: The Theorist Of Tricontinental Revolution
A Revolutionary DisappearedMehdi Ben Barka did not die a martyr on the battlefield. He did not perish in a heroic last stand. He was disappeared—abducted in the streets of Paris in 1965, tortured, murdered, and vanished without a trace. His body was never found. His name became a whisper. But his work lives.Ben Barka was... Continue Reading →
Africa Doesn’t Need Aid – It Needs The Keys To The Vault
This Isn’t Aid. It’s Extraction. Shut It Down. By Weaponized Information April 12, 2025 Western “aid” is the propaganda wing of a global theft operation. Africa isn’t poor—it’s being looted. And now, the same empires that underdeveloped the continent are back for the lithium, cobalt, and manganese to power their next wave of domination. This... Continue Reading →
Fanon Was No Heretic: The Psychiatrist Who Diagnosed Empire and Prescribed Revolution
Voice of the Wretched Frantz Fanon did not theorize revolution from a safe distance. He wrote it in blood, fire, and exile. A Martinican-born psychiatrist turned Algerian freedom fighter, Fanon was not just a critic of colonialism—he was a combatant. He diagnosed the colonial condition not only as a system of domination, but as a... Continue Reading →
The Long Memory of the Land: Leonard Peltier, Settler Justice, and the Unfinished Struggle for Indigenous Liberation
By Weaponized Information After nearly half a century in prison, Leonard Peltier is finally free—but the system that caged him remains. His release is not a resolution, but a rupture. A call to confront settler colonialism at its root. They locked him away for 48 years. Not because he was guilty—but because he was dangerous.... Continue Reading →