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 →
The Colonial Architecture of Class: How Race Was Engineered to Divide Labor and Stabilize Empire
What masquerades as a race-class conflict in America is merely the internal workings of empire. By tracing the evolution of labor relations, it becomes clear that racial divisions are structural, not superficial nuisances. This overlapping oppression demands a unified, revolutionary response, dispelling false dichotomies to reveal a singular system demanding collective action.
Empire vs. Sekou Odinga: Counterinsurgency, Community Power, and the War for Black Liberation (1944–2024)
Jamaica, Queens forged a revolutionary in the shadow of Malcolm X. The Black Panther Party built dual power — and the state answered with disruption. Underground struggle met federal conspiracy and thirty-three years of captivity. Elderhood returned him to a new generation still facing the same empire. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Black... Continue Reading →