The Guardian romanticizes women's escape into witchcraft retreats, masking a harsher truth: capitalism has fragmented community, only to sell facsimiles of it back to the lonely. Beneath the rituals of sisterhood lies a commodified search for healing, where pain is packaged as a wellness experience for those who can afford it. This article stirs empathy but shies away from confronting the systemic forces that produced these wounds. Women are not merely seeking solace; they are expressing anger born from societal oppression. The challenge is to transition from commodified refuge to collective action, turning shared grief into political power.
Stars, Stripes, and Holy Water: How a Dying Empire Learned to Pray Again
The Rededicate 250 rally manifests an America grappling with its imperial decline, revealing the ruling class’s desperation to fuse nationalism with spirituality. Beneath the spectacle of Christianity cloaked in patriotism lies a profound social crisis fueled by economic insecurity and political fragmentation. This event serves as a liturgy for a faltering empire, seeking to stabilize itself through divine deception, while conveniently ignoring the historical injustices it thrives upon. Critics alarmingly diminish the event's significance, merely framing it as religious overtone, while the deeper threat is a political theology exacerbating class power dynamics and moralizing imperial oppression. As the empire crumbles, the call for authentic solidarity becomes paramount.
When Empire Finds God: The Intercept, The Holy War on Iran and the Rebirth of American Theocracy
A war sold through fear is now preached as destiny, as the language of intelligence gives way to the language of God. Behind the spectacle of evangelical zeal lies a harder truth: Iran sits at the crossroads of global energy and imperial control. At home, the same forces sanctifying war are reshaping society through family... Continue Reading →
American Theocracy Revisited: Oil, Empire, and the Gospel of Decline
A dissection of how energy dependence, apocalyptic politics, and debt-fueled capitalism fused into a governing logic of U.S. power—and why, nearly two decades later, the contradictions Phillips identified have not resolved but evolved into a harder imperial strategy centered on energy command, infrastructural control, and technofascist crisis management. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information |... Continue Reading →