When labor is outlawed and life is disposable, strangulation becomes political economy By Pablo Katari | Weaponized Information | August 1, 2025 I. Of Beggars and Bandits: The Specter Beneath Civilization History, when written by the victorious pickpockets of the world-market, is quick to condemn those who steal outside its formal registers. And so we... 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 →
Kyle Bass vs. East Texas: How Capital, Courts, and Media Conspire to Drain the Commons
A Dallas financier eyes 16 billion gallons a year from the Carrizo-Wilcox Aquifer. Residents sound the alarm, but Texas law protects the pump, not the people. The media neutralizes outrage with polite technocracy. This is water war by paperwork—and the empire calls it development. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information July 30, 2025 The Law... Continue Reading →
The Think Tank Purge: How the Trump Regime Is Reprogramming Empire
The Pentagon’s think tank withdrawal is not a pause—it’s a purge to enforce loyalty and silence dissent. Politico’s coverage masks this authoritarian turn with bureaucratic language and selective omission. What looks like retreat is actually a technofascist realignment of imperial control. To resist it, we must build revolutionary infrastructure, from propaganda to digital counter-power. By... Continue Reading →
Primitive Accumulation by Narcotic: The Opium Wars and the Forcible Integration of China into the World Market
How Britain’s opium gunboats shattered China’s agrarian order, dismembered its sovereignty, and inaugurated the long colonial century that revolution would one day buryBy Pablo Katari | Weaponized Information| July 26, 2025Exchange as Pretext, War as MechanismThe circulation of commodities requires peace; the expansion of capital requires war. In the case of China, this contradiction found... 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 →
Making America Great Again: The Tariff Wall and the Sanction Noose
How technofascism enforces capitalist decline through economic siege at home and abroadBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information| July 23, 2025Of Steel and Chains: The Coercive Logic of Economic PowerIn the bedtime stories of capitalism, tariffs are framed as patriotic tools—guardians of domestic industry, defenders of national sovereignty. Sanctions, we’re told, are moral instruments—punishments reserved for... Continue Reading →
Russiagate and the Liberal Technofascist Coup
How the White Ruling Class Used a Manufactured Crisis to Cement Algorithmic Control and Suppress DissentBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | July 22, 2025Who Built the Lie?Russiagate was never a scandal. It was a strategy. A full-spectrum psychological operation masked as patriotism, manufactured by a collapsing empire to reassert control over its own population.... Continue Reading →
Revolution After Victory: Mao’s Sixty Points and the Struggle to Stay Red
In the wake of socialist victory, Mao sounded the alarm: triumph breeds complacency, and revolution demands method. His 1958 “Sixty Points” was not a plan—it was a weapon. A lesson in how to keep the revolution alive by transforming leadership, confronting contradiction, and placing politics in command. Weaponized Statesman Series | Mao in Nanning, 1958... Continue Reading →
Discipline in the Ashes: Stalin, Famine, and the First Breath of Socialist Construction
🟥 Discipline in the Ashes: Stalin, Famine, and the First Breath of Socialist Construction In the aftermath of imperialist invasion and civil war, Stalin’s address to the Eleventh Congress in 1922 was not a celebration of victory, but a warning against illusion. Standing amid starvation, disillusionment, and creeping bureaucratism, he issued a challenge to the... Continue Reading →