Two besieged nations—survivors of sanctions, sabotage, and siege—sign a strategic alliance that challenges the foundations of empire and lays bricks for a multipolar world. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 8, 2025 Part I: Reuters Mumbles While History Marches It’s always the same tone—dead-eyed, polite, and hollow. Reuters tells you that Putin and Maduro... Continue Reading →
Hugo Chávez: The Revolutionary From the Plains
How a Soldier Became a Socialist, a President Became a Protagonist, and a People Became a Power By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information Part I: From the Plains of Sabaneta to the Barracks “I am from the people, and I owe myself to the people.” — Hugo Chávez Hugo Chávez was born on July 28,... Continue Reading →
Dhoruba Bin Wahad: Stormborn Panther, Prisoner of Empire, Revolutionary Still
Part I: From the Ghetto to the Vanguard—The Birth of a Revolutionary Before he was Dhoruba Bin Wahad, he was Richard Earl Moore—born in the belly of the beast, Harlem 1944, raised in the volatile and segregated cauldron of the South Bronx. His youth unfolded amidst state violence, poverty, racial containment, and the heroin that... Continue Reading →
Karl Marx: The Revolutionary Who Armed the World With Critique
On May 5, we don’t commemorate Marx to worship the past. We commemorate him to wage the future.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationMay 5, 2025“Philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point, however, is to change it.” — Karl Marx, Theses on FeuerbachPart I: From Trier to the World: A Revolutionary Born... Continue Reading →
James Connolly: Socialist, Syndicalist, Soldier of Irish Freedom
Prologue: The Last Words of a Revolutionary On May 12, 1916, James Connolly was too wounded to stand. A shattered ankle, torn by British bullets during the Easter Rising, had left him unable to walk. So the British tied him to a chair. Then they shot him. They thought they were killing a rebellion. What... Continue Reading →
Jean-Bertrand Aristide: The Revolutionary Priest of Haiti
Epigraph: "If one day they carry me out of here dead, know that I will die for justice, for peace, for a better life for all Haitians." — Jean-Bertrand Aristide Part I: From the Parish of the Poor Jean-Bertrand Aristide was born on July 15, 1953, in Port-Salut, a small town in southern Haiti. Orphaned... Continue Reading →
Frantz Fanon: The Revolutionary Psychiatrist Who Weaponized Theory
Part I: From Martinique to Blida – A Rebel Mind in the Making Frantz Fanon was not born into revolution. He was born into colonial contradiction. In 1925, under the shadow of French imperialism, Fanon came screaming into the world in Fort-de-France, Martinique—a so-called "overseas department" that was in reality a Black colony governed by... Continue Reading →
Maurice Bishop: The People’s Prime Minister of the Caribbean
Maurice Bishop: The People’s Prime Minister of the Caribbean Prologue: A Revolutionary Cut Down, A Flame That Never Died In 1983, a Black socialist leader named Maurice Bishop was lined up against a wall by a U.S.-backed faction and gunned down. He was unarmed. He was beloved. And he had just begun building what many... Continue Reading →
Daniel Ortega: The Man Who Walked With Sandino’s Ghost
Daniel Ortega: The Man Who Walked With Sandino’s Ghost Prologue: Sandino Never Died Augusto César Sandino was executed by the U.S.-backed Somoza regime in 1934, but he never truly died. He lived in the hills of Las Segovias. In the machete songs of the peasantry. In the anti-imperialist speeches smuggled from Havana. In the whispers... Continue Reading →
Muammar Gaddafi: The Son of the Desert, the Enemy of Empire
Prologue: The Man They Couldn’t Control Before the bombs. Before the lies. Before the bayonet and the betrayal, Muammar Gaddafi was a barefoot boy in the red sands of Sirte, raised under a sky scorched by empire. He lived in a tent. He read the Quran by lamplight. He watched colonial soldiers parade through his... Continue Reading →