At the 80th anniversary of the Workers’ Party of Korea, Kim Jong Un reasserts the moral and political grammar of a revolution that endures by self-correction, unity, and defiance—transforming siege into pedagogy, hardship into method, and permanence into proof of socialism’s vitality.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | October 11, 2025Pyongyang, October 10 — The... Continue Reading →
Revolution Is Not an Import: Kim Il Sung and the Struggle to Establish Juche
Weaponized Statesman Series | Kim Il Sung at Pyongyang, December 1955 In 1955, Kim Il Sung confronted a Party adrift in imitation. This was not a call for isolation, but a demand to root revolution in the lived experience of the Korean people. Juche, he argued, was not a slogan—it was a method of survival.... Continue Reading →
Revolution in Transition: Bolivia, Lawfare, and the Next Phase of Anti-Imperialist Struggle
The court approved Andronico, but shut the door on Evo. But this isn’t just a legal reshuffling—it’s a political rupture. Beneath the robes lies a deeper battle over who holds power in Bolivia: the state, or the people who built the revolution from below.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJune 6, 2025June 7, 2025From Courtrooms to... Continue Reading →
Red Autumn: The Korean War and the Highest Form of Proletarian Internationalism
This is not the story of a Cold War chess match or a border conflict spun out of control. This is the story of a revolutionary people defending their land and their future against the most brutal empire in human history—and winning. Korea did not collapse. It stood, with the full force of China and... Continue Reading →