Black Gold, Broken Chains: The AES, China, and the Sahel’s Revolt Against Empire

The recent oil agreements between Niger and Chinese firms aren't just another business deal; they expose a seismic shift in Africa's political landscape. As Western powers cling to outdated neocolonial frameworks, Niger is bargaining fiercely for sovereignty over its vast resources, rejecting mere extraction in favor of local control. This isn't a clean break; it’s messy and contradictory, revealing the power struggle over who governs the circulatory systems of wealth. The Sahel countries are navigating a new reality where they challenge traditional dependency and assert their agency. History is shifting beneath our feet—can Africa carve out a new path, or will old patterns reassert themselves?

Chains of Reform: How the IMF Turned Senegal’s Crisis into a Weapon

What they call “debt sustainability” is imperial sabotage by spreadsheet—colonial extraction repackaged as fiscal responsibility, and enforced through technofascist obedience.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 25, 2025Polite Chains and Quiet Crimes: How Financial Journalism Launders Empire “Senegal’s Debt Burden Reaches Critical Threshold” isn’t just a report—it’s a weapon. Dressed up as economic commentary,... Continue Reading →

Samarium for the Empire: How Visa Bans, Rare Earths, and the Nigerian Elite Feed the Technofascist Order

West Africa’s mineral-rich states aren’t “open for business”—they’re open to plunder. But a rising regional revolt is rewriting the terms.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | June 2025Part I – Samarium for the Empire: Digging through the Visa Smoke-Screen The story splashed across Reuters’ Africa wire reads like a polite business memo to Wall Street:... Continue Reading →

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