In one of the most bizarre and telling moments of U.S. diplomacy in recent memory, American officials in Greenland's capital of Nuuk went door-to-door asking residents if they wanted to meet Usha Vance—the wife of Vice President J.D. Vance. Not a single Greenlander took them up on the offer. No crowds. No curious onlookers. No... Continue Reading →
From Counterinsurgency to Technofascism: “The Border Crossed Us” – The Colonization of Aztlan and the Rise of Counterinsurgency (Part 5)
From Land Theft to TechnofascismThe U.S. didn’t just annex land. It annexed people.In 1848, under the barrel of a settler gun, Mexico surrendered half its national territory to the United States. But the so-called Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo didn’t just redraw borders—it redefined the logic of American conquest. Overnight, tens of thousands of Mexicans—Indigenous, mestizo,... Continue Reading →
Yemen and the Chokepoint of Empire: Red Sea Resistance in the Age of Multipolarity
I. Yemen: The Speck That Blocks the Empire At the southwestern tip of the Arabian Peninsula lies a country that the Western press often portrays as "poor," "tribal," and "ungovernable." Yet this same country—Yemen—happens to sit on one of the most strategic chokepoints in the global capitalist system: the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, through which nearly... Continue Reading →
From Counterinsurgency to Technofascism: The Wages of Whiteness and the Birth of the Settler Working Class (Part 4)
Part IV: The Wages of Whiteness and the Birth of the Settler Working Class Race, Class, and the Making of Counterinsurgency in Colonial America Before the ink dried on any founding document, before a single phrase about liberty or the pursuit of happiness was ever uttered, the American project had already begun in conquest and... Continue Reading →
Anatomy of the White Ruling Class: The Yankees: Aristocracy of Finance, Architects of Empire (Part 2)
Genesis of the Yankee Class — British Settler Colonialism and the Birth of the White Ruling Class “In the beginning, all ruling classes seize the land. They kill for it, write laws to keep it, and call themselves civilized.” The white ruling class in the United States did not originate in 1776. Its birth lies... Continue Reading →
Anatomy of the White Ruling Class: An Introduction (Part 1)
We live in the shadow of a decaying empire, run not by presidents or parliaments, but by a transnational oligarchy that merges finance, fossil fuel, and digital surveillance into a single, unified machine of domination. This is not the rule of ideas—it is the dictatorship of capital. To confront it, we must understand it—not in... Continue Reading →
From Counterinsurgency to Technofascism: Slave Patrols, Plantations, and the Logic of Anti-Black Insurgency (Part 3)
Part III: Slave Patrols, Plantations, and the Logic of Anti-Black InsurgencyRepression as Governance in the Settler RepublicBefore there were police, there were patrols.Before there were laws, there were chains.Before there was a constitution, there was the whip and the gallows.And behind it all, there was fear—settler fear. Fear that the enslaved might one day rise... Continue Reading →
In Haiti, the Guns Speak the Language of Empire
In Haiti, the Guns Speak the Language of EmpireBy: Kapone | Weaponized InformationThis article is based on and inspired by Danny Shaw’s original piece published on CounterPunch, titled “In Occupied Port-au-Prince, Over 1 Million Haitians Have Been Displaced by Paramilitary Gangs.”Port-au-Prince is burning again. Not with the fire of revolution, but with the scorched-earth policy... Continue Reading →
From Counterinsurgency to Technofascism: The First War – Indigenous Nations and the Birth of US Counterinsurgency (Part 2)
Part II: The First War — Indigenous Nations and the Birth of Settler Counterinsurgency Genocide, Dispossession, and the Military Architecture of Empire Before the first African was chained and dragged across the Atlantic, before the first slave patrol rode through Carolina swamps, before the United States called itself a nation—there was a war. A war... Continue Reading →
From Counterinsurgency to Technofascism: Origins of the Colonial Repression State (Part I)
Part I: Origins of the Colonial Repression StateSettler Colonialism, Racial Regimes, and the Birth of Counterinsurgency in the U.S.The United States did not invent counterinsurgency—it inherited, refined, and perfected it as a tool of racial and colonial domination. To understand the evolution of modern policing, surveillance, and domestic warfare in the U.S., we must return... Continue Reading →