A forensic reconstruction of how sanctions, sabotage, terror proxies, narrative warfare, and regional forward bases have converged into a full-spectrum hybrid war against Iran — and why the January 2026 unrest is not a spontaneous crisis, but the latest front in a decades-long campaign to break an independent state.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information |... Continue Reading →
Posting Empire: Trump 2.0 and the Open Turn to Colonial Rule
How Trump’s Social Media Declarations Signal the Geopolitical, Economic, and Strategic Architecture of Fortress America and the American PoleBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 12, 2026When Empire Posts Its Intentions There are moments when the empire speaks in polished paragraphs—through white papers, summit communiqués, and the priestly language of “shared values.” And then... Continue Reading →
Greenland and the Architecture of Fortress America
How U.S. Homeland Defense, Arctic Chokepoints, and Critical Minerals Are Converging into a New Territorial Imperial ProjectBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 11, 2026Greenland Was Never a Joke — It Was a Map of Empire Speaking Out LoudWhen Trump first floated the idea of the United States “acquiring” Greenland, plenty of people laughed... Continue Reading →
Fortress America and the Oil Ultimatum: Venezuela, Hyper-Imperialism, and the Open Consolidation of the American Pole
This essay argues that Trump 2.0 marks the open phase of U.S. hyper-imperialism, where coercion replaces consent and hemispheric dominance is enforced without disguise. Using Venezuela as the central case, it traces how leader abduction, naval encirclement, oil custodianship, and legal warfare form a consolidated strategy to subordinate sovereign states to the American Pole under... Continue Reading →
Trump, Greenland, and the Return of Territorial Empire
An empire tries to blame one man for what its strategy requires. The Arctic is revealed as a military node, an extractive frontier, and a colonial question. Beneath alliance etiquette, imperial authority demands control, not cooperation. From Greenland to the Global South, resistance exposes the system speaking plainly. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information |... Continue Reading →
Markets, Mandarins, and the Managed Decline of Empire
Experts speak so capital can rule without consent. Facts reveal an imperial system under strain, not a neutral economy at risk. Monetary discipline, tariffs, and militarization form a single strategy of control. The task before the people is organization, not faith in forecasters.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJanuary 6, 2026How the Economy Is Ventriloquized Through... Continue Reading →
Bamako 2025: When the Sahel Put Sovereignty on Paper
The Second Session of the AES/CESS as a Turning Point in State Power, Regional Integration, and the Unfinished Question of Rupture By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 2, 2026 What Was Actually Decided in Bamako: Reading the Communiqué as a Political Act The second session of the College of Heads of State of... Continue Reading →
When the Court Preaches Independence While Power Governs in Silence
Judicial authority is framed as neutral refuge amid political chaos. Emergency procedure quietly accelerates executive power at home and abroad. History and ritual are deployed to manage a growing crisis of legitimacy. Working people face governance without consent while being asked for faith.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 1, 2026A Warm Blanket Called... Continue Reading →
Europe’s Generals and Europe’s People: War Readiness as a Ruling-Class Project
Military elites recast war as an unavoidable condition rather than a political choice. Selective facts and strategic silences transform militarization into common sense. “Preparedness” emerges as a method of social discipline under imperial strain. Working people confront a system demanding sacrifice while offering no future. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 1, 2026... Continue Reading →
The Quiet Return of the Gun: Japan, the United States, and the Quiet Normalization of War
An Associated Press report presents Japan’s remilitarization as reluctant self-defense rather than a political choice shaped by power. Beneath the calm language, constitutional erosion and alliance discipline are reframed as common sense. Placed in historical and geopolitical context, Japan’s military buildup appears as a reassignment of roles within a U.S.-led imperial order in crisis. Against... Continue Reading →