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 →
Che Was No Icon: The Guerilla Who Dreamed Beyond Borders
Not a Brand, But a Blueprint Ernesto “Che” Guevara has been commodified into irrelevance—his image plastered on t-shirts, reduced to aesthetic rebellion, stripped of his revolutionary essence. But Che was no icon. He was a militant internationalist, a Marxist strategist, and a doctor of liberation whose life was a synthesis of theory and fire. Born... 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 →
Ben Bella Was No Push Over: The Nationalist Who Tried To Pivot Left
The Fighter Who Entered the Fire Ahmed Ben Bella was not the chosen candidate of empire. He was not a functionary of the French, nor a placeholder for the West. He was a guerrilla, a revolutionary nationalist, and the face of Algeria’s storm-borne independence. But unlike those who would take the flag of liberation and... Continue Reading →
Fidel Was No Tyrant: Revolution at the Empire’s Doorstep
Why Fidel Still Lives in the Struggles of the Oppressed “What the imperialists cannot forgive is that we have made a socialist revolution right under their noses.” — Fidel Castro Fidel Castro did something unforgivable. He led a socialist revolution ninety miles from Miami. He overthrew a U.S.-backed dictator, expelled American corporations, abolished private property,... Continue Reading →
Argentina Was Sold to BlackRock for Pennies—and the IMF Wrote the Bill
Argentina wasn’t reformed—it was repossessed. Milei didn’t save the economy—he sold it. The IMF wrote the contract, BlackRock took the keys, and Trump 2.0 cheered as another Global South nation was dragged back into colonial debt servitude. By Weaponized Information April 12, 2025 The peso has been sacrificed. The republic dismembered. And Wall Street got... Continue Reading →
Africa Doesn’t Need Aid – It Needs The Keys To The Vault
This Isn’t Aid. It’s Extraction. Shut It Down. By Weaponized Information April 12, 2025 Western “aid” is the propaganda wing of a global theft operation. Africa isn’t poor—it’s being looted. And now, the same empires that underdeveloped the continent are back for the lithium, cobalt, and manganese to power their next wave of domination. This... Continue Reading →
Fanon Was No Heretic: The Psychiatrist Who Diagnosed Empire and Prescribed Revolution
Voice of the Wretched Frantz Fanon did not theorize revolution from a safe distance. He wrote it in blood, fire, and exile. A Martinican-born psychiatrist turned Algerian freedom fighter, Fanon was not just a critic of colonialism—he was a combatant. He diagnosed the colonial condition not only as a system of domination, but as a... Continue Reading →
The Deal is Dead. Long Live the Lie: How U.S. Imperialism Sabotaged the Iran Nuclear Accord and Blamed the Victim
As Iran rejects Trump’s so-called “new deal,” it’s time to remember who really broke the original one—and why the empire fears an independent Iran more than a nuclear one. By Weaponized Information The charade is back in full swing. Tehran has now publicly declared what any half-awake observer already knew: Trump’s so-called “new Iran deal”... Continue Reading →
The Long Memory of the Land: Leonard Peltier, Settler Justice, and the Unfinished Struggle for Indigenous Liberation
By Weaponized Information After nearly half a century in prison, Leonard Peltier is finally free—but the system that caged him remains. His release is not a resolution, but a rupture. A call to confront settler colonialism at its root. They locked him away for 48 years. Not because he was guilty—but because he was dangerous.... Continue Reading →