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 →
Reopening the Cage: Bretton Woods Returns to a Country That Refused to Kneel
The article presents IMF and World Bank re-engagement as routine normalization, masking a political event shaped by years of institutional blockade and external pressure. Beneath that surface lies a struggle over sovereignty, where constitutional legitimacy, sanctions, and anti-neoliberal memory redefine what “recognition” actually means. The return of global finance collides with a still-living project of... Continue Reading →
The Wound They Refuse to Heal: Taiwan, Empire, and the War Against Chinese Sovereignty
Reuters doesn’t just report events—it organizes reality through an imperial lens that disciplines how China is seen and understood. Beneath the surface, the Taiwan question reveals a dense structure of civil war legacy, U.S. militarization, legal contradictions, and economic interdependence. The truth is not “cross-strait tension,” but an unfinished revolutionary contradiction weaponized by empire to... Continue Reading →
Choking to Death on an Empty Stomach: How Empire Turns War into Hunger
Reuters reports a BRICS food reserve proposal as risk management, but strips away the imperial structure shaping the crisis. The material record shows a world where war, sanctions, and supply chains converge to produce food insecurity at a global scale. Beneath the headlines lies a system that has transformed food, fertilizer, and shipping into weapons... 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 →
The Capitalized Womb: How Slavery Turned Black Women’s Reproduction into American Wealth
JSTOR’s tidy little history lesson reveals something real, but only after liberal scholarship scrubs the auction block clean enough for polite readers. Beneath the archive sits a system that turned rape, forced birth, and hereditary bondage into law, credit, and capital. The real story is not bad science gone astray, but a slave order using... 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 →
The Fool Who Moved the Mountains Still Walks Among Us: China’s Long March to Socialism and the Emergence of the Multipolar World Order
From Mao’s seizure of sovereignty to Xi’s effort to discipline capital, China’s modern history is neither a fall from revolutionary purity nor a smooth ascent into capitalism, but a protracted socialist struggle through contradiction. Each phase of development generated new class forces, new dangers, and new strategic adjustments, as the Party-state sought to preserve political... Continue Reading →