A Weaponized Propaganda Excavation of how the New York Times launders imperial war through the language of strategic error.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | March 12, 2026The Tears of the ArsonistThere is a familiar ritual in the house organs of empire. First the bombs fall, then the panic sets in, and then some respectable... Continue Reading →
Empire’s Last Illusion: When the Colonizers Can No Longer Colonize
The language of “chaos” now coming from European leaders reveals something deeper than geopolitical instability. It reflects the growing panic of a ruling class confronting the limits of a world order built through colonial domination and sustained by imperial power.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | March 11, 2026When Power Begins to Speak in the... Continue Reading →
The Lithium Frontier: Empire, Oligarchs, and the Struggle for the Salt Flats of the Andes
Beneath the investor narratives of strategic minerals and geopolitical competition lies a deeper struggle over land, labor, and sovereignty. As the global economy reorganizes itself around electrification and battery technology, the salt flats of the Andes have become a new frontier in the long history of resource extraction in Latin America — where communities, states,... Continue Reading →
The Guardian’s “Raw Deal” and Washington’s Fine Print: Zambia, Health Aid, and the Politics of Conditional Care
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 →
One Nation Under Hostage: The Epstein Archive and the Anatomy of Elite Power
Whitney Webb did not write a book about a scandal. She wrote about a system. In Volume I, she traces blackmail from the Cold War’s underbelly into the bloodstream of U.S. empire, showing how intelligence agencies, financiers, and organized crime learned to discipline one another through leverage instead of law. In Volume II, Jeffrey Epstein... Continue Reading →
Burkina Faso, Ghana, and Business Insider Africa: Corridor Cooperation in the Shadow of Uneven Sovereignty
Business Insider Africa frames the Ghana–Burkina agreements as a pragmatic security and trade reset, and we begin by excavating how that cooperation is narrated. We then map the documented terrain beneath the headline: ECOWAS rupture, AES consolidation, French military withdrawal, AFRICOM continuity, gold extraction circuits, CFA monetary tether, IMF discipline, and multipolar infrastructure competition. From... 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 →
Berlin’s Boardrooms, NATO’s Generals, and Beijing’s Factories: Germany’s Trade Deficit and the Crisis of Imperial Supremacy
A romance metaphor conceals structural strain. The trade ledger exposes export contraction and rising militarization. Industrial rivalry is recoded as security doctrine. Workers and colonized nations confront the costs—and the opening.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 19, 2026When the Empire Calls It Heartbreak Our excavation begins with a February 19, 2026 piece from... Continue Reading →
Booming Balance Sheets, Breaking Backs: CNBC, Monopoly Capital, and the “Boomcession” Lie
Booming Balance Sheets, Breaking Backs: CNBC, Monopoly Capital, and the “Boomcession” LieSubhead:Corporate media reframes structural exploitation as a quirky economic paradox.The data reveal a class regime where profits surge while labor absorbs risk.Debt, housing, and hiring slowdowns expose how growth is captured upward and insecurity pushed downward.From tenant unions to debtors’ assemblies, working people are... Continue Reading →