I. Where Capital Paved Over the Commune In the Pearl River Delta (PRD), China’s revolutionary land meets its reform-era rupture. Once the periphery of Maoist developmentalism, the PRD became the launching pad of Deng Xiaoping’s Opening and Reform—home to Shenzhen, the first Special Economic Zone, and ground zero for China's integration into global capital. Today,... Continue Reading →
The Energy Exit That Wasn’t: Europe, Russia, and the Propaganda of Imperial Dependency
How the EU’s “independence” narrative conceals logistics imperialism, NATO militarization, and the global class war for energy sovereigntyBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | May 6, 2025I. The EU’s “Energy Independence” as Propaganda of Omission and FramingPOLITICO’s coverage of the EU’s “final plan” to quit Russian energy isn’t just a story—it’s an ideological operation. The... Continue Reading →
Tangyue Village and the Revival of the Collective Rural Commune
I. Beyond Capital, Back to the Soil In the mountains of Guizhou, a different kind of revolution is unfolding. Not a return to Maoist slogans, nor a copy of Western green development. Tangyue Village offers something else entirely—a quiet but profound reawakening of the collective spirit in the heart of China’s countryside. Here, amid the... Continue Reading →
Greening the Sands — Desertification, Mass Mobilization, and the Fight for Ecosocialism in China’s Arid Zones
I. The Empire of Sand The deserts of northern China are not natural frontiers—they are contested terrains. The creeping dunes of Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, and Gansu have long marked the edge of empire, agriculture, and habitation. Once forested and fertile in ancient times, these arid zones have become both ecological battlegrounds and revolutionary laboratories. Today,... Continue Reading →
Regenerating the Yellow Earth — The Loess Plateau and the Prospects for Rural Ecosocialism
I. Where the Soil Remembers RevolutionThere is a place in China where the land itself seems to testify to history. The Loess Plateau—broad, wind-carved, and deeply scarred—is both cradle and cautionary tale. It is here that Chinese civilization took root thousands of years ago, and it is here that erosion, overgrazing, and war once reduced... Continue Reading →
Can the Mekong Flow Red? China’s Lancang River Basin and the Struggle for Ecosocialism
I. Where the River Meets the SystemThe Mekong River is ancient. It has carved life into the land for thousands of years, flowing through China, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam. But in the 21st century, its upper reaches—the Lancang, inside China’s Yunnan Province—have become more than a river. They’re a battleground. On one side: biodiversity, Indigenous... Continue Reading →
The Long Road to Multipolarity: BRICS+ and the Contradictions of the Imperial Order
Part I: The Emergence of Multipolarity — A Dialectical-Historical Materialist AnalysisMultipolarity Emerges from ContradictionMultipolarity didn’t emerge from diplomatic handshakes or academic white papers. It emerged from blood, debt, occupation, collapse, and rebellion. It is not a utopian dream projected onto the future. It is the visible tremor of a system in breakdown, and of the... Continue Reading →
Toward an Ecosocialist Civilization: China’s Eco-Civilization Model in Historical Perspective
I. Why Ecosocialism, Why China? The Earth is burning—and it didn’t set itself on fire. The floods, the heat, the poisoned rivers, the vanishing forests—these aren’t natural disasters. They’re symptoms of a system. A system built on stolen land, stolen labor, and stolen time. Capitalism. It doesn’t just exploit people. It plunders the Earth itself.... Continue Reading →