At a summit built to “shape future governments,” African heads of state confront old imperial binaries inside a new architecture of power. Tucker Carlson presses the familiar frames—China versus the West, democracy as sermon, race as property—while sanctions, AI infrastructure, and development finance reveal the harder machinery beneath the talk. Zimbabwe’s discipline, Sierra Leone’s education... Continue Reading →
The K They Drew, The System They Hid: Confidence, Concentration, and the Architecture of a Split Economy
Wall Street calls it sentiment. Corporate media calls it divergence. But beneath the alphabet metaphors lies a decades-long transfer of wealth, power, and sovereignty from labor to capital. The numbers do not describe a mood swing. They describe a system working exactly as designed. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | February 11, 2026 When... Continue Reading →
W.E.B. Du Bois and the Long Arc of Radicalization
From Talented Tenth Idealism to Communist Internationalism, Du Bois’s Life Exposes the Color Line as a Global System, White Labor’s Imperial Bargain, Reconstruction as Crushed Revolution, and the Unfinished Struggle Against Colonial Capitalism.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black History Matters Series | February 11, 2026I. A Child of Emancipation, Raised in the Shadow... Continue Reading →
Assata Shakur and the War Against Black Liberation: Insurgency, Counterinsurgency, and the Long Exile of a Revolutionary
Insurgency inside the empire exposed the structure of repression. Her prosecution revealed counterintelligence as domestic warfare. Her escape redefined political struggle as international. Her exile confirmed that revolution does not end at the prison gate. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black History Matters Series | February 10, 2026 When the Ghetto Became a... Continue Reading →
Trump, ABC, and the Monopoly Class: Tariffs, Tax Cuts, and the Crisis of Imperial Political Economy
Corporate media frames tariffs as a consumer morality tale while shielding monopoly power. The data reveals regressive burdens, profit expansion, and geopolitical escalation beneath the headline numbers. Trade warfare emerges as imperial recalibration in a fading unipolar order. Labor, colonized nations, and multipolar movements must organize where the contradictions already burn.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized... Continue Reading →
John Horse and the Black Seminole War for Freedom
Long before emancipation was declared from Washington, enslaved Africans and Indigenous Seminoles built an armed republic in the Florida swamps. Their alliance waged the longest and most successful slave insurgency in U.S. history. The United States responded with invasion, removal, and counterrevolution. John Horse’s life exposes empire not as destiny, but as a structure contested... 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 →
Harriet Tubman and the Science of Escape: Maroon Strategy, Labor Rebellion, and the Black Woman Who Turned Slavery Against Itself
Harriet Tubman did not merely flee bondage; she attacked the economic foundations of slavery by organizing collective escape, disrupting the immobilization of Black labor, and later striking directly at Confederate infrastructure in war. Emerging from a regime that depended on the total control of Black women’s bodies, she transformed from exploited worker into disciplined strategist,... Continue Reading →
Growth Without Development: How Capitalism Produces Abundance, Manufactures Poverty, and Calls It Progress
In The Political Economy of Growth, Paul A. Baran dismantles the myth that growth is neutral or benevolent, exposing it as a class project rooted in surplus extraction and imperial power. He shows how monopoly capitalism turns productivity into waste and development into stagnation, both at home and across the colonized world. Against liberal economics... Continue Reading →
Fred Hampton and the Revolutionary Meaning of Solidarity
Chicago is shown here not as a northern refuge of progress, but as what it actually was and remains: an internal colony where segregation, poverty, and police occupation shaped Fred Hampton into a revolutionary Marxist with no illusions about the system he was up against. From those conditions came a politics willing to go where... Continue Reading →