A liberal alarm rings in the pages of The Guardian, exposing troubling terms while leaving the aid architecture itself intact. The material terrain reveals how debt-shaped constraints narrow Zambia’s choices before any negotiation begins. The agreement fuses life-sustaining health systems with mineral governance and long-term informational commitments. Across the Global South, emerging refusals and alternative... Continue Reading →
Steel, Credit, and the Ghost of Unipolarity: Excavating Washington’s Gospel of Force
An op-ed declares that only the gun shapes history. We audit the numbers behind the metaphor. We situate debt, ports, sanctions, and sovereignty inside the wider architecture of global power. And we argue that multipolar bargaining space—not military nostalgia—is the terrain of our century. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 26, 2026 The... Continue Reading →
The Prince Without a Crown: Gramsci’s Blueprint for Power in the Age of Managed Dissent
This review excavates “The Modern Prince” as Gramsci’s prison-forged answer to the West’s revolutionary stall: why fortified capitalism survives crisis through consent, institutions, and “common sense.” It reconstructs his core strategic arsenal—collective will, hegemony, war of position, and the party as the organized brain of the oppressed—against the fantasies of spontaneity and the dead-end of... Continue Reading →
The BBC, Zelensky and the Price of Primacy: When Hegemony Calls Itself Defense
This essay excavates the BBC’s framing of the Ukraine war to reveal how catastrophe rhetoric and moral personalization manufacture consent. It reconstructs the documented record—NATO expansion, U.S. strategic doctrine, Minsk diplomacy, sanctions, and militarization—to widen the frame beyond headline urgency. It then situates the conflict within the deeper contradiction between imperial hegemony and national sovereignty,... Continue Reading →
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 →
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 →
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 →
When Empire Tries to Cage Knowledge: China, Monopoly Capital, and the Intellectual Property War
What begins as a story about counterfeit toys reveals a deeper moral architecture designed to police who is allowed to innovate and who must remain a follower. A closer look at the empirical record exposes intellectual property not as a neutral legal system, but as a historically weaponized regime built to preserve hierarchy once monopoly... Continue Reading →
Washington Calls It “Partnership” While Vietnam Calls It Survival: How Empire Pathologizes the Memory of War
Corporate media reframes a nation’s hard-earned vigilance as psychological insecurity, quietly teaching readers to distrust the survival instincts of a people who have already endured invasion and annihilation. The buried history of bombardment, chemical warfare, and economic leverage resurfaces to show that Hanoi’s caution grows from lived material reality, not ideological stubbornness. Behind the language... Continue Reading →