Gold, Lithium, and the Chains of Empire: Zimbabwe, China, and the Battle to Break the Colonial Economy

The imperial press calls Zimbabwe’s recovery “bizarre,” revealing more about empire’s ideology than Africa’s reality. Beneath the headlines lies a material transformation driven by gold, lithium, labor, and survival within a system built to constrain it. As Zimbabwe pushes toward beneficiation and partners with China, it enters a global struggle over who controls resources, industry,... Continue Reading →

Settlers in the Wreckage: J. Sakai, Technofascism, and the War for the Future

J. Sakai’s interviews force the U.S. left to confront the settler-colonial foundations it has spent generations avoiding. His analysis exposes the myth of the revolutionary white proletariat, the collapse of liberal illusions, and the expansion of war into every domain of life. But Weaponized Information pushes further, grounding his insights in monopoly finance capital, technofascism,... Continue Reading →

Fault Lines of Empire: U.S. Strategy, Pakistani Class Power, and the Crisis of Sovereignty

Asia Times frames Pakistan’s instability as a strategic obstacle, obscuring the material and political forces shaping the terrain. The crisis emerges from IMF austerity, elite domination, climate catastrophe, and a deepening political rupture following the coup against Imran Khan. Imperialist recalibration collides with multipolar transition, exposing the struggle between sovereignty and neocolonial extraction. Workers, peasants,... Continue Reading →

Apples to Apples: Superexploitation from Orchards to iPhones

What appears to be a comparison between two unrelated commodities—apples picked in U.S. orchards and Apple devices assembled across the Global South—is in fact a comparison between two forms of the same capitalist-imperialist labor regime. In U.S. agriculture, superexploitation is organized through settler-colonial land relations, racialized migrant labor, H-2A dependency, deportability, and the broader coercive... Continue Reading →

Empire at the Doorstep: How the Narco War Becomes a License to Penetrate Sovereignty

What appears as a tragic incident in Chihuahua is exposed as a carefully managed narrative that obscures the presence of foreign power operating inside Mexico. The factual record reveals a dense security architecture where intelligence, surveillance, and training pipelines blur the line between cooperation and control. Stripped of illusion, the episode reflects a deeper contradiction... Continue Reading →

Inside the House of Cards: How Empire Manages Crisis Through Memory, Civility, and Myth

Four former presidents gather under corporate media lights to present democracy as a shared moral inheritance, grounded in unity, civility, and participation. Beneath that performance lies a material history of deregulation, war, surveillance, and repression that produced the very crisis now being discussed. The interview reveals not reflection, but a ruling-class effort to manage legitimacy... Continue Reading →

Concrete and Control: Imperial Media vs Sovereign Development in the China–Cambodia Energy Nexus

This essay excavates how Western energy media transforms a Cambodian hydropower project into a geopolitical morality play, recoding sovereign development as “Chinese influence.” It reconstructs the material reality beneath that narrative: fuel dependence, state planning, bilateral agreements, regional grid integration, and the political economy of infrastructure. It then reframes the project as a node in... Continue Reading →

The Return of the State: How Industrial Policy Became a Weapon of Global Power

An emerging “consensus” around industrial policy masks a deeper ideological project disciplining development within the boundaries of global capital. The material reality reveals a world defined by subsidy wars, coercion, and uneven development, where state intervention is already reshaping the global economy. China stands at the center of this contradiction as a socialist-led state navigating... Continue Reading →

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