A Weaponized Information Report on the III Cumbre Social de los Pueblos de América Latina y el Caribe — Where the peoples of the continent gathered to defend the Zone of Peace, advance desdollarization, secure food sovereignty, and confront the ongoing imperial restructuring of the United States. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | November... Continue Reading →
Resilience for Whom? The EU’s 2025 Strategic Foresight Report and the Crisis of Hyper-Imperialism in a Multipolar Transition
Brussels calls it “Resilience 2.0.” In reality it is a manual for managing imperial decline: shifting Europe from Russian pipelines to U.S. LNG, seizing assets through lawfare, codifying dependence on American cloud and chips, militarizing budgets, and policing speech. Across the Global South, a multipolar counter-project points toward another horizon—cooperation, sovereignty, and solidarity. The choice... Continue Reading →
Pentagon’s Fortress Turn: From China Threats to Homeland Militarization
Politico reports that the Pentagon’s new National Defense Strategy shifts away from deterring Beijing and toward domestic deployments, Caribbean patrols, border militarization, and hemispheric policing — a move it calls a “striking reversal” that leaves U.S. allies uneasy.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 6, 2025The Art of Dressing Bayonets in Silk On September... Continue Reading →
When China Arms the Sahel, the West Cries “Danger” — But the Real Threat is to Empire
Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger are breaking from the colonial script — and the multipolar future they’re building is what really keeps Washington awake at nightBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 9, 2025I. Through the Barrel of a Narrative“China Delivers Artillery and Armor to Burkina Faso” by Dylan Malyasov, published in Defence Blog... Continue Reading →
The Occupier’s Script: U.S. Military Empire, Asian Compradors, and the Battle for East Asia’s Future
The Atlantic Council, Asia Times, and U.S.-funded scholars like Hanjin Lew are scripting a future where peace is only possible under American military occupation. This essay dismantles the psychological operation that frames Asian sovereignty as instability and imperial presence as protection. It excavates the buried histories of U.S. war crimes, suppressed diplomacy, and regional movements... Continue Reading →