The Pentagon hands off warships, Newsweek hands off narratives, and a comprador class signs away sovereignty—all in time for the 30th anniversary of “normalized” relations By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 21, 2025 Ink Over Napalm: Newsweek’s Cutter Diplomacy and the Manufacture of Consent Newsweek’s breezy dispatch about Washington “growing a defense partnership... Continue Reading →
Asia Is Breaking the Dollar’s Chains—And the Empire Is Losing Its Grip
De-dollarization isn’t a financial glitch—it’s a global revolt against empire’s economic leash. From Malaysia to China, the Global South is building the scaffolding of sovereignty while Wall Street watches its power bleed out. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 12, 2025 I. The Dollar’s Funeral and the Media’s Panic On June 11, 2025,... Continue Reading →
Puppet Falls, People Rise: South Korea, U.S. Hegemony, and the Limits of Electoral Sovereignty
Excavating the fall of a U.S. puppet, the rise of popular resistance, and the imperial media’s desperate attempt to bury Korea’s break with comprador rule beneath fear, framing, and cognitive warfare. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 7, 2025 They Don't Call It a Coup—They Call It “Democracy in Crisis” The New York... Continue Reading →
Summits Without Strings: When the Global South Plans Its Own Future
By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 27, 2025 Part I – Unmasking the Messenger, Deconstructing the Narrative Eileen Ng has carved out a career writing from the corridors of colonial continuity—first in Malaysia, then in Singapore, now under the polished byline of a transnational news syndicate: the Associated Press. She is not a lone... Continue Reading →
Redlines: May 27, 2025
Redlines: May 27, 2025 Daily revolutionary dispatches from the frontlines of global class war, settler empire, and technofascist recalibration. Africa World Bank Slashes Kenya's Growth Forecast Amid Neoliberal Chokehold The World Bank has cut Kenya’s 2025 growth projection from 5.2% to 4.5%, blaming “private sector constraints”—a euphemism for the strangling effects of debt, austerity, and... Continue Reading →