The Associated Press presents the UN resolution as a moment of moral recognition, but its reliance on official voices and diplomatic language reveals how power narrates history without disturbing itself. The material record shows that slavery’s wealth still structures the present, and that organized reparations movements—from Africa to the Caribbean to grassroots struggles—are confronting that... Continue Reading →
Fortress America: From “Operation Total Extermination” to the Consolidation of the American Pole
The Intercept’s reporting reveals a widening U.S.-aligned war across Latin America, exposing a moment where imperial language begins to outpace its own ideological cover. The documented facts—cross-border strikes, coalition warfare, regime change operations, and indefinite escalation—align directly with official doctrine and emerging hemispheric war architecture. When situated within the crisis of imperialism and the rise... Continue Reading →
When Labor Strikes Inside the War Machine: AP News, General Dynamics, and Imperial Labor Struggle
A shipyard walkout in Maine exposes a deeper contradiction: workers fighting for survival while producing the instruments of empire—and the political line required to break that alignment. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | March 23, 2026 When the War Yard Gets Reduced to a Payroll Dispute There is a very particular kind of reporting... Continue Reading →
Politico and the Art of Imperial Whispering: How Narrative Manages Crisis, War, and a Fracturing Western Bloc
What presents itself as sober reporting reveals, on closer inspection, a carefully arranged narrative that fragments reality into isolated claims while obscuring the material ground beneath them. A close reading exposes the specific devices through which uncertainty is manufactured, alliances are subtly disciplined, and strategic tensions are recast as manageable intrigue. When the missing historical,... Continue Reading →
Blackout and Blockade: Empire’s War on Cuba and the Cracks in the American Pole
As U.S. imperialism tightens its grip on the hemisphere through economic warfare, Cuba stands at the front line—where the struggle between domination and sovereign development, between imperial command and emerging multipolar possibility, is being fought in real time. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | March 17, 2026 When a Siege Learns to Speak the... Continue Reading →
When the Signal Becomes the Weapon: Empire, Media, and the New Discipline of Narrative
As the United States loses its monopoly over global storytelling, regulatory power, media concentration, and wartime pressure converge to manage a fractured information order—and reveal how narrative control adapts under imperial strain. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | March 17, 2026 When Power Clears Its Throat and Calls It a Debate In Dominick Mastrangelo’s... Continue Reading →
From “Much Abuse” to World Domination: How the Los Angeles Times Manages the Memory of Conquest
This Weaponized Propaganda Excavation shows how the Los Angeles Times reduces colonial conquest to the language of diplomatic regret and historical moderation. It reconstructs the underlying reality of that conquest as a system of mass death, forced labor, and global resource extraction. It reframes this process as the foundation of the modern capitalist world economy... Continue Reading →
Axios at the Oil Chokepoint: How Imperial Aggression Gets Packaged as Maritime Order
This WPE dissects how Axios turns a threatened expansion of war into the language of shipping, order, and responsible management. It reconstructs the material terrain beneath that narrative: the Strait of Hormuz as a world energy artery and Kharg Island as a critical node in Iran’s oil system. It then reframes the crisis as a... Continue Reading →
NBC’s Cuba Narrative and the Siege It Refuses to See
NBC’s coverage frames Cuba’s economic adjustment as a dramatic crisis, but a close reading of the article reveals the narrative techniques and framing devices used to construct that impression. Beneath the headline lies a far denser economic terrain shaped by sanctions, energy shortages, inflation, and the long search for productive stability under siege. When these... Continue Reading →
From COSCO to BlackRock: The Hidden Struggle Over the Panama Canal Chokepoint
A logistics trade report tells us COSCO left Panama’s Balboa terminal because of a tidy legal dispute, the sort of story written from the boardroom side of the dock. Look closer and the facts show something rougher: U.S. pressure, ports changing hands, and global finance capital circling one of the narrow passages through which the... Continue Reading →