Africa is sitting on a treasure trove of critical minerals vital for the future of technology and energy, yet continues to be stymied by outdated infrastructure and foreign control. McKinsey’s report highlights the potential for $40 billion in mining value, but fails to confront the core issue: Africa’s continued subjugation as a resource mine rather than a sovereign player. This narrative masks Africa’s political struggles and reinforces colonial patterns under a veneer of opportunity. The necessity for a continental strategy emerges as a means to reclaim economic power and transform the mineral wealth from a tool of exploitation into a foundation for self-determination and industrial capability. The danger lies not in missed opportunities, but in repeating the same historical mistakes that have kept Africa relegated to mere supplier status.
Malcolm X and the Making of a Revolutionary Internationalist
From colonial violence in the American Midwest to the global battlefields of Africa and Asia, Malcolm’s life traces the sharpening of Black consciousness under empire. His final years mark not moderation but expansion — from religious nationalism to human rights insurgency and anti-imperialist alignment. This essay follows the dialectical arc of his transformation and the... Continue Reading →
Neo-Colonialism and the Limits of Independence
Kwame Nkrumah’s Neo-Colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism and the Structural Trap That Confronted the Ghanaian Revolution By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | December 14, 2025 Writing from Inside the Trap Neo-Colonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism is not a book written from the safety of theory. It is written from inside power, under... Continue Reading →