NBC’s Cuba Narrative and the Siege It Refuses to See

NBC’s coverage frames Cuba’s economic adjustment as a dramatic crisis, but a close reading of the article reveals the narrative techniques and framing devices used to construct that impression. Beneath the headline lies a far denser economic terrain shaped by sanctions, energy shortages, inflation, and the long search for productive stability under siege. When these... Continue Reading →

After the Empire — Before the Collapse

When Emmanuel Todd wrote After the Empire, Washington still believed it ruled a permanent unipolar world. Todd saw something different: an empire sustained less by production than by financial tribute and military spectacle. Two decades later the contradictions he described—economic dependency, micromilitarism, and ideological decay—have matured into the turbulent transition now reshaping global power.By Prince... Continue Reading →

Axis of Empire: The Coup, the Shah, and the War Against Iranian Sovereignty

Afshin Matin-Asgari’s history exposes how U.S.–Iran relations were forged not through partnership but through intervention, oil politics, and the overthrow of democratic sovereignty. This review excavates the buried architecture of empire behind the 1953 CIA coup and the construction of the Shah’s authoritarian client state. It follows how the Iranian Revolution shattered that imperial arrangement... Continue Reading →

The Lithium Frontier: Empire, Oligarchs, and the Struggle for the Salt Flats of the Andes

Beneath the investor narratives of strategic minerals and geopolitical competition lies a deeper struggle over land, labor, and sovereignty. As the global economy reorganizes itself around electrification and battery technology, the salt flats of the Andes have become a new frontier in the long history of resource extraction in Latin America — where communities, states,... Continue Reading →

The Architects of Empire: How the Anglo-American Establishment Built the Modern World Order

From Cecil Rhodes’ imperial secret society to the trilateral system that governs global capitalism today, the modern world order did not emerge by accident. It was constructed—patiently, institutionally, and across generations—by networks of bankers, strategists, policymakers, and imperial planners determined to organize power on a planetary scale. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | Weaponized... Continue Reading →

The Prince Without a Crown: Gramsci’s Blueprint for Power in the Age of Managed Dissent

This review excavates “The Modern Prince” as Gramsci’s prison-forged answer to the West’s revolutionary stall: why fortified capitalism survives crisis through consent, institutions, and “common sense.” It reconstructs his core strategic arsenal—collective will, hegemony, war of position, and the party as the organized brain of the oppressed—against the fantasies of spontaneity and the dead-end of... Continue Reading →

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 →

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