The imperial press calls Zimbabwe’s recovery “bizarre,” revealing more about empire’s ideology than Africa’s reality. Beneath the headlines lies a material transformation driven by gold, lithium, labor, and survival within a system built to constrain it. As Zimbabwe pushes toward beneficiation and partners with China, it enters a global struggle over who controls resources, industry,... Continue Reading →
Apples to Apples: Superexploitation from Orchards to iPhones
What appears to be a comparison between two unrelated commodities—apples picked in U.S. orchards and Apple devices assembled across the Global South—is in fact a comparison between two forms of the same capitalist-imperialist labor regime. In U.S. agriculture, superexploitation is organized through settler-colonial land relations, racialized migrant labor, H-2A dependency, deportability, and the broader coercive... Continue Reading →
Concrete and Control: Imperial Media vs Sovereign Development in the China–Cambodia Energy Nexus
This essay excavates how Western energy media transforms a Cambodian hydropower project into a geopolitical morality play, recoding sovereign development as “Chinese influence.” It reconstructs the material reality beneath that narrative: fuel dependence, state planning, bilateral agreements, regional grid integration, and the political economy of infrastructure. It then reframes the project as a node in... Continue Reading →
The Return of the State: How Industrial Policy Became a Weapon of Global Power
An emerging “consensus” around industrial policy masks a deeper ideological project disciplining development within the boundaries of global capital. The material reality reveals a world defined by subsidy wars, coercion, and uneven development, where state intervention is already reshaping the global economy. China stands at the center of this contradiction as a socialist-led state navigating... Continue Reading →
Leverage for Whom?: Bangladesh, Multipolarity, and the Managed Art of Dependence
Asia Times doesn’t just argue for strategy—it reframes dependency as sophistication, urging Bangladesh to negotiate its place in a system it does not control. Beneath the language of leverage lies a material reality of export concentration, external inputs, financial discipline, and geopolitical pressure shaping every move. Multipolarity opens space—but only within limits, where new alignments... Continue Reading →
Africa Against the World Market: Hosea Jaffe, Imperialism, and the Long Struggle for Liberation
A Weaponized Intellects review of A History of Africa that excavates Hosea Jaffe’s uncompromising analysis of colonialism, class formation, and imperial domination—situating his intervention within the liberation struggles of his time and assessing its enduring relevance for understanding Africa, the world system, and the unfinished project of revolutionary transformation today. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized... Continue Reading →
The Machine Was Built to Watch You: How Bipartisan Power Engineered America’s Surveillance State
They tell you this is about Democrats failing to stand up to Trump, but that’s a lie—both parties built the spy machine together. The receipts show a straight line from the Patriot Act to Section 702, signed, funded, and protected by the same politicians now playing concerned. What we’re dealing with isn’t a policy debate—it’s... Continue Reading →
Order in the Rubble: How Empire Calls Coercion Peace in Lebanon
USA TODAY reports the bombs, the bodies, and the diplomatic noise, but leaves the machinery of power in the shadows. Beneath the language of “escalation” lies a longer structure of occupation, ceasefire manipulation, infrastructural warfare, and pressure on Lebanese sovereignty. The strikes on Lebanon are not an interruption of order, but one of the ways... Continue Reading →
Tripwires of Empire: The Gulf Monarchies, the U.S.-Israel War on Iran, and the Crisis of Imperial Security
This essay begins by excavating how The Guardian recasts a U.S.-Israeli war and its aftermath into a fear narrative centered on Iran while muting the imperial structure behind the violence. It then reconstructs the real terrain: Gulf militarization, sanctions on Iran, strategic chokepoints, regional recalibration, and the diplomatic and economic relations the article leaves in... Continue Reading →
From Ceasefire Spectacle to Open Threat: How U.S. Power Reveals Its Limits in Iran and the Emerging Multipolar Order
The media narrative frames the war through the language of objectives and outcomes, masking how imperial violence is normalized and depoliticized. A reconstruction of the facts reveals a deeper reality: sanctions, covert operations, chokepoint control, and historical intervention form the material architecture of this conflict. What emerges is not policy failure but a system in... Continue Reading →