From Alliance to Containment: How Anglo-American Power Engineered the Cold War

The essay provocatively dismantles the myth that the Cold War was merely a reaction to "Soviet aggression." Instead, it reveals it as America's calculated strategy to reinforce a capitalist world order post-World War II, driven by anxieties over rising leftist movements and anti-colonial uprisings. It highlights how the U.S. initiated a campaign of political warfare and economic reconstruction through the Marshall Plan, effectively shaping Europe and other regions under its imperial influence. To Washington, the real danger was not communism but the threat of genuine independence that challenged capitalist dominance. The Cold War was less about ideological battles and more about inter-imperialist struggles to determine global economic control.

Manufacturing a “Xi Doctrine”: How Imperial Analysis Distorts China’s Development Strategy

A think tank narrative repackages China’s Five-Year Plan as a leader-driven doctrine, masking its institutional and historical character. The actual policy reveals a multi-dimensional strategy shaped by domestic priorities and external pressure. This transition reflects a deeper socialist development process unfolding through contradiction, not confusion. Across multiple fronts, emerging forces are beginning to resist the... Continue Reading →

The Prince Without a Crown: Gramsci’s Blueprint for Power in the Age of Managed Dissent

This review excavates “The Modern Prince” as Gramsci’s prison-forged answer to the West’s revolutionary stall: why fortified capitalism survives crisis through consent, institutions, and “common sense.” It reconstructs his core strategic arsenal—collective will, hegemony, war of position, and the party as the organized brain of the oppressed—against the fantasies of spontaneity and the dead-end of... Continue Reading →

Gramsci Disarmed: How Empire Turned a Communist Strategist into a Cultural Mascot

A polemical reconstruction of Antonio Gramsci as a Leninist revolutionary whose theory of hegemony was forged to solve the problem of power under advanced capitalism—and how imperial academia captured, fragmented, and neutralized that theory to manage dissent rather than overthrow domination.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | December 22, 2025Gramsci in the Imperial Seminar RoomIn... Continue Reading →

The Party That Wouldn’t Break: Kim Jong Un and the Dialectic of Socialist Permanence

At the 80th anniversary of the Workers’ Party of Korea, Kim Jong Un reasserts the moral and political grammar of a revolution that endures by self-correction, unity, and defiance—transforming siege into pedagogy, hardship into method, and permanence into proof of socialism’s vitality.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | October 11, 2025Pyongyang, October 10 — The... Continue Reading →

Website Powered by WordPress.com.

Up ↑