This review reconstructs the Korean War not as a sudden conflict in 1950, but as the culmination of colonial transformation, revolutionary struggle, and imperial intervention between 1945 and 1947. Drawing on Bruce Cumings, it reveals how liberation opened a radical possibility that was contained, divided, and ultimately reshaped into two opposing systems—making war not accidental,... Continue Reading →
Framing Sovereignty as Senility: Excavating the BBC’s Narrative on Ahn Hak-sop
How imperial propaganda turns testimony into tragedy, and why Ahn Hak-sop’s final walk demands we join living struggles for Korean sovereignty By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 1, 2025 Framing Sovereignty as Senility: Excavating the BBC’s Narrative on Ahn Hak-sop The story the British press wants us to absorb is simple: a frail... Continue Reading →
The Empire’s Real Death Camps: Strategic Hamlets, Ethnic Cleansing, and the Hypocrisy of U.S. Genocide Accusations
They say Stalin was a monster for displacing hundreds of thousands in wartime. But they say nothing about the 8.5 million Vietnamese peasants forcibly removed by the U.S. military in just two years. This essay rips off the mask of Western humanitarianism and names the real genocidaires. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 26,... Continue Reading →
Lines in the Soil, Fire in the Sky: Vietnam, Korea, and the Empire’s Broken Map
Korea was carved. Vietnam refused. Two revolutions, two outcomes—both exposing the fragility of U.S. empire and the enduring power of people’s war. This is the story of partition as counterrevolution, of counterinsurgency as colonial relapse, and of liberation carved not in treaties but in blood and resolve. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information May 26,... 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 →