Originally published in 1970 at the height of Black radical insurgency, James Boggs’s Racism and the Class Struggle delivers a merciless indictment of American capitalism as a settler-colonial system sustained by the racial division of labor. Drawing from his own experience as a Black autoworker and Marxist theorist, Boggs exposes the limitations of white Marxism,... Continue Reading →
Black Scare, Red Scare, Class War
Charisse Burden-Stelly’s Scientific Autopsy of U.S. Empire and Its Racial Counterinsurgency LogicBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 3, 2025Capitalist Racism Is Not a Bug—It’s the Operating SystemThere are books that describe the system, books that critique the system, and then there are books that make you realize you were still living inside the... Continue Reading →
Unite or Perish: Kwame Nkrumah’s Final Warning to a Fragmented Africa
Weaponized Statesman Series | Kwame Nkrumah at Addis Ababa, 1963Only African unity—political, economic, and military—can overthrow the neocolonial regime. Nkrumah saw the future. The question is whether we’re ready to fight for it.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | July 25, 2025Unite or Perish: The Mandate of a Revolutionary Moment“No sporadic act nor pious resolution... Continue Reading →
Communes, Collectives, and the Ecosocialist Horizon
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information Reclaiming the Future from Below As capitalist modernity collapses under the weight of its own contradictions—ecological breakdown, mass displacement, monopolized food systems, and imperial overreach—the world finds itself at a crossroads. On one path: technofascist dystopia, ruled by billionaire climate bunkers and digitized scarcity. On the other: the slow, stubborn... Continue Reading →
Revolutionaries Don’t Die: The Global Afterlife of Tupac Shakur
From the hoods of Los Angeles to the murals of Soweto, from prison notebooks to platinum plaques, Tupac Shakur lived—and died—like a soldier of the people. This is not a eulogy. It is a call to arms.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 16, 2025Born of Panthers, Named for an Uprising“I’m not saying I’m... Continue Reading →
Peasants and Revolution: From Mao to Cabral
By Prince Kapone, Weaponized Information The Revolutionary Subject from the Soil Western Marxism long wrote off the peasantry as pre-political, reactionary, or at best transitional. But history—especially in the colonial and semi-colonial world—has exposed that lie with blood and fire. The most successful revolutions of the 20th century—China, Vietnam, Cuba, Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau—were peasant-based, anti-colonial,... Continue Reading →
Not All Slavery is the Same: A Dialectical Analysis of Global Slaveries and the Rise of Capitalism
Settler Myths and the Weaponization of 'Whataboutisms' By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 1, 2025 “Africans enslaved each other too.” If you’ve ever dared to speak on the horrors of the trans-Atlantic slave trade, you’ve heard it. Settlers love this line—not because they care about historical nuance, but because it helps them sleep... Continue Reading →
No Socialism on Stolen Land: Why Land Back and Reparations Are Revolutionary Prerequisites
You can’t build a workers’ republic on a settler colony. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 1, 2025 Revolution Without Reckoning? You hear it all the time—usually from someone quoting Marx on wages or waving a red flag at a march: “We need to focus on the working class.” But ask them what... Continue Reading →
The Agrarian Question in the Age of Technofascism: Peasant Struggle, Climate Catastrophe, and the Future of Revolution
By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 27, 2025 Land, Labor, Liberation In an era when Silicon Valley titans speak of AI farms on Mars and the IMF preaches “digital inclusion” to starving peasants, the question must be asked: who still feeds the world? The answer—painful, simple, revolutionary—is: the dispossessed. The global peasantry, often... Continue Reading →
Yuri Kochiyama: The Bridge Between the Barracks and the Barricades
She held Malcolm as he died, but she held the movement together while it lived. From internment camp to Panther meetings, from trial dates to prison visits, Yuri Kochiyama built the infrastructure of solidarity that empire couldn’t break.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationMay 19, 2025Born on the Wrong Side of the War: Internment, Injustice, and... Continue Reading →