The Roads Remember Túpac Amaru: Jacobin Calls Popular Power a Vacuum

Bolivia is experiencing a seismic shift, as the indigenous and working-class masses rise against a government they see as complicit with imperial interests and corporate power. Jacobin's portrayal of this struggle as chaotic “political vacuum” fails to grasp the reality: the people are not absent from politics; they are reclaiming agency. While the ruling class laments blocked roads and instability, they ignore the genuine political force being forged by those occupying them—workers, campesinos, and indigenous communities asserting power where previously silenced. The barricades are not just obstacles; they symbolize resistance against commodification and repression, signaling a reawakening of history in the fight for sovereignty and justice.

Cocaine Cowboys and Lithium Indians: Bolivia, the Monroe Doctrine, and the Return of the Colonial Republic

Bolivia is ablaze, but The New York Times misses the mark, framing protests as mere chaos ignited by a presidential betrayal. The truth is far more profound: a collision of historical projects poised for supremacy. Behind the unrest lies a struggle against neocolonial forces, with President Paz's agrarian reforms threatening Indigenous and campesino sovereignty. The culprits are not just disenfranchised voters but a systematic push toward resource extraction and imperialism. The uprising is a collective cry not just for policy change but for self-determination, land rights, and a unified front against re-colonization. The narrative must shift from superficial crisis to deep-rooted rebellion.

The Lithium Frontier: Empire, Oligarchs, and the Struggle for the Salt Flats of the Andes

Beneath the investor narratives of strategic minerals and geopolitical competition lies a deeper struggle over land, labor, and sovereignty. As the global economy reorganizes itself around electrification and battery technology, the salt flats of the Andes have become a new frontier in the long history of resource extraction in Latin America — where communities, states,... Continue Reading →

Echoes of the Commune: The Incan Mode of Production and the Suppressed Horizon of History

Land without landlords, labor without wages, surplus without profit—what Tawantinsuyu reveals about the socialist future buried beneath empireBy Pablo Katari | Weaponized Information| July 23, 2025I. History in ChainsThe conquest of the Americas was not merely the theft of land, gold, or labor—it was the extinguishing of another world. The chroniclers of empire, armed with... Continue Reading →

Redlines: June 24,2025

Redlines – June 24, 2025 Daily Dispatches from the Frontlines of Empire: Exposing Capitalist Crisis, Imperialist Recalibration, and the Global Fight for Liberation AFRICA Niger Nationalizes Uranium—Paris Gets Evicted from the Pit France is out. Niger’s government just confirmed that uranium extraction will continue under national control after booting Orano from Arlit. That’s 63 years... Continue Reading →

Redlines: June 6, 2025

Redlines – June 6, 2025Daily Dispatches from the Frontlines of Empire: Exposing Capitalist Crisis, Imperialist Recalibration, and the Global Struggle for LiberationAFRICAAFC Touts “$4 Trillion” in African Capital—but Who Really Holds the Keys?The Africa Finance Corporation is claiming that the continent has over $4 trillion in local capital that could be used to fund infrastructure.... Continue Reading →