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 →
Fred Hampton and the Revolutionary Meaning of Solidarity
Chicago is shown here not as a northern refuge of progress, but as what it actually was and remains: an internal colony where segregation, poverty, and police occupation shaped Fred Hampton into a revolutionary Marxist with no illusions about the system he was up against. From those conditions came a politics willing to go where... Continue Reading →
Lil’ Bobby Hutton and the Generation That Refused to Beg
A teenage Panther whose life exposed the colonial reality inside the United States. His political awakening marked the rise of organized Black revolutionary youth. His killing revealed how the state responds when the oppressed build power.His memory remains a lesson in struggle, organization, and historical continuity. Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black History Matters... Continue Reading →
Assata Shakur: Autobiography of Liberation, Indictment of Empire
A 21-Gun Salute to a Revolutionary Who Died Free and Unbroken By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Intellects | September 26, 2025 Assata in the Crosshairs They called her a fugitive, a terrorist, a threat to the republic. The newspapers splashed her face across their pages like a wanted poster, as if she were a bandit... Continue Reading →
Reparations or Nothing: Penny Hess and the Death of Western Marxism
Weaponized Intellects Review of Overturning the Culture of ViolenceBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 21, 2025Turning the World Right Side UpPenny Hess’s Overturning the Culture of Violence does not mince words—it announces from the opening lines that neutrality is treason. Hess follows the leadership of Omali Yeshitela and the African People’s Socialist Party,... Continue Reading →
An Amerikan Family and the Bloodline of Revolution: The Shakurs vs. the Settler State
How Santi Elijah Holley’s book becomes an indictment of Western Marxism and a battlefield map of Black liberation in the heart of empireBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 7, 2025They Tried to Kill a Bloodline, Not Just a ManThe story doesn’t begin with Tupac. Or even Afeni. It begins with Saladin Shakur—a man... Continue Reading →
Exorcising the Ghost of Malcolm: Class Struggle, Colonial Liberation, and the Failure of Western Marxism
Ghosts in Our Blood exhumes the internationalist, anti-imperialist, and Grenadian roots of Malcolm X, smashing the museum glass of liberal iconography and Western Marxist distortion to return him to the world struggle that claimed him.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 12, 2025I. Bringing Malcolm Back to Earth — Out of the Museum, Away... Continue Reading →
Murder Incorporated: The Empire’s Kill List in Three Volumes
Mumia Abu-Jamal and Stephen Vittoria’s trilogy is a five-century autopsy of the United States — a counter-history that dissects the settler-colonial birth, imperialist adolescence, and technofascist present of the American project, demanding that readers turn knowledge into revolutionary weaponry. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 11, 2025 Framing a 500-Year Indictment With Murder... Continue Reading →
“Blood in My Eye”: George Jackson, Prison War Communism, and the Scientific Weaponry of the Lumpen Vanguard
On the first day of Black August, we excavate George Jackson’s final manuscript—not to memorialize him, but to weaponize his theory of revolution behind bars, and his call for the liquidation of empire by its most discarded class. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 1, 2025 This System Has No Reformers—Only Gravediggers George... 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 →