When propaganda is printed as journalism, and nuclear sovereignty is framed as provocation, the goal isn’t truth — it’s obedience.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | July 12, 2025Anonymous Tongues, Imperial ScriptsOn July 12, 2025, Axios published a story headlined “Putin urges Iran to take ‘zero enrichment’ nuclear deal with U.S., sources say,” which rattled the multipolar... Continue Reading →
Brazil and Nigeria’s $1B Agro Deal: South–South Maneuver or Machinery of Capital?
A billion-dollar agreement to mechanize Nigerian agriculture may sidestep Western finance—but not capitalist extraction. The South is moving, negotiating, and resisting. The question is: who holds the tools, and who gets fed? By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 29, 2025 Development Without Context, Empire Without Name The Reuters piece titled "Nigeria and Brazil... Continue Reading →
Revolution in Transition: Bolivia, Lawfare, and the Next Phase of Anti-Imperialist Struggle
The court approved Andronico, but shut the door on Evo. But this isn’t just a legal reshuffling—it’s a political rupture. Beneath the robes lies a deeper battle over who holds power in Bolivia: the state, or the people who built the revolution from below.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJune 6, 2025June 7, 2025From Courtrooms to... Continue Reading →
Corn Diplomacy and the Class War: Vietnam Navigates the Grain Trap
Behind the headlines of U.S.–Vietnam agricultural trade lies a deeper battle over food sovereignty, socialist survival, and the slow recalibration of empire in crisis. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 4, 2025The Corn Beneath the Curtain: Bloomberg’s Imperial HarvestThis article was penned by Hallie Gu, a professional amplifier of corporate agriculture narratives whose... Continue Reading →
No Solidarity For Snitches: When the ‘Opposition’ Talks Like a Leftist and Walks Like the CIA
How the Fake Left Parrots Empire, Undermines Sovereignty, and Aids the Siege on VenezuelaBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 31, 2025Part I – When “Critical” Becomes Contradictory: Excavating a Manufactured Dissent The article under examination, titled “The pro-Maduro left’s blind spots: Against the ‘nuancing’ of Venezuela’s disaster” by Emiliano Teran Mantovani, was published... Continue Reading →