China needs what Africa has. The U.S. wants to stop it from getting it. But beneath the geopolitical chess match lies a deeper question: who do Africa's resources serve—foreign capital or the African people? I. The Empire Is Cracking, But the Scramble Ain’t Over Africa’s soil has always attracted foreign boots, bankers, and businessmen. The... Continue Reading →
Empire Reloaded: Trump’s Africa Hustle and the Machinery of Hyper-Imperialism
Behind the suits, speeches, and staged photo-ops, Trump’s return to Africa is a crude remix of old empire tactics—guns, loans, and lies. The only thing new is the software. I. Africa, Empire, and the Fork in the Road Let’s call it what it is. Africa is being pulled in two directions. On one side, you’ve... Continue Reading →
Redlines: April 17, 2025
Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration.AfricaIs Zimbabwe wooing Donald Trump by paying white farmers and ending tariffs?Zimbabwe’s leadership is bending over backwards to win U.S. approval—reimbursing white settler farmers and lifting trade protections. But this isn’t reconciliation; it’s neo-colonial obedience. The comprador class hopes Washington will... Continue Reading →
Redlines: April 16, 2025
Redlines – April 16, 2025 Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration. Africa Elon Musk vs. South Africa: A Neo-Colonial Tech Clash Elon Musk's refusal to comply with South Africa's Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) regulations for Starlink's operation is not merely a business decision—it’s a manifestation of... Continue Reading →
Redlines: April 15, 2025
Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration.AfricaPipeline Politics: Algeria, Italy and the Great Game in North AfricaThe latest developments in North Africa expose a high-stakes contest where the channels of oil and gas become instruments for global domination. Algeria’s role as an energy hub is recast as... Continue Reading →
Digital Taylorism: Algorithmic Chains in the Age of Technofascism
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information The stopwatch is dead—long live the algorithm. In the age of imperial decay, the white ruling class has reinvented labor discipline as cybernetic domination. Digital Taylorism is not the future of work—it’s the automation of class war. I. From Stopwatch to Surveillance: The Return of Taylorism In the early 20th... Continue Reading →
Can the Mekong Flow Red? China’s Lancang River Basin and the Struggle for Ecosocialism
I. Where the River Meets the SystemThe Mekong River is ancient. It has carved life into the land for thousands of years, flowing through China, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. But in the 21st century, its upper reaches—the Lancang, inside China’s Yunnan Province—have become more than a river. They’re a battleground. On one side: biodiversity, Indigenous... Continue Reading →
The Political Economy of Fiber Optics Under Technofascism
The Political Economy of Fiber Optics Under TechnofascismBy Weaponized Information At the dawn of the 21st century, fiber optic infrastructure emerged as the central nervous system of the global digital economy. Today, under the regime of technofascism—our term for the fusion of monopoly finance capital, Big Tech, fossil fuel empires, and the repressive surveillance state—fiber... Continue Reading →
The Long Road to Multipolarity: BRICS+ and the Contradictions of the Imperial Order
Part I: The Emergence of Multipolarity — A Dialectical-Historical Materialist AnalysisMultipolarity Emerges from ContradictionMultipolarity didn’t emerge from diplomatic handshakes or academic white papers. It emerged from blood, debt, occupation, collapse, and rebellion. It is not a utopian dream projected onto the future. It is the visible tremor of a system in breakdown, and of the... Continue Reading →
Indonesia at the Crossroads: Between BRICS, Beijing, and the Bayonets of Empire
As Washington pivots, Jakarta edges toward sovereignty. But the empire never sleeps.There’s an old revolutionary saying: some nations get to walk through history; others have to crawl through the trenches of it. Indonesia, the sprawling archipelago of over 17,000 islands, has been doing both—marching and crawling, staggering and rising—from the ashes of Dutch plunder, Japanese... Continue Reading →