How U.S. Homeland Defense, Arctic Chokepoints, and Critical Minerals Are Converging into a New Territorial Imperial ProjectBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | January 11, 2026Greenland Was Never a Joke — It Was a Map of Empire Speaking Out LoudWhen Trump first floated the idea of the United States “acquiring” Greenland, plenty of people laughed... Continue Reading →
The Quiet Return of the Gun: Japan, the United States, and the Quiet Normalization of War
An Associated Press report presents Japan’s remilitarization as reluctant self-defense rather than a political choice shaped by power. Beneath the calm language, constitutional erosion and alliance discipline are reframed as common sense. Placed in historical and geopolitical context, Japan’s military buildup appears as a reassignment of roles within a U.S.-led imperial order in crisis. Against... Continue Reading →
Pirates of Profit: Sanctions, Seizures, and the Return of Imperial Plunder
From mercantile privateers to sanctioned seizures, how piracy has always been capitalism’s hidden engine—and why it is resurfacing in the age of U.S. imperial declineBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | December 12, 2025Pirates of the Caribbean, 2025: The Seizure That Exposed an Empire’s Old HungerAt dawn on December 11, 2025, the United States staged... Continue Reading →
Rearming the Past to Police the Future: Japan, the U.S., and the Return of Empire in the Pacific
How a $70 Billion Defense Budget, Missile-Riddled Islands, and a Manufactured “Security Crisis” Are Rewriting the Map of Asia By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | December 4, 2025 Budgets, Islands and the Quiet Manufacture of Consent If you just skim the surface of this USNI News piece, it looks like any other routine defense... Continue Reading →
Sharks of the Caribbean: Washington’s War Against Sovereignty in Colombia and Venezuela
The United States is escalating a hybrid war across the region — attacking civilian vessels, disciplining Petro, and tightening its grip on Colombia as part of a broader imperial strategy to crush multipolar sovereignty in the Americas.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | October 2025Blood in the Water In the churning waters of the Caribbean,... Continue Reading →
F-35s Over Guyana: Exxon’s Oil, Venezuela’s Claim, and the Empire’s Fear of Multipolarity
Washington flies warplanes to guard Exxon’s contracts, calls it “stability,” and smears Venezuela as the aggressor. Yet beneath the noise lies the real contradiction: a people’s fight for sovereignty against the Fortress Americas project in a world breaking toward multipolarity.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 12, 2025Investor Calm at the Barrel of a... Continue Reading →
The Theater of Legal Illusions: U.S. Freedom of Navigation as Empire’s Last Act
The headlines paint China as the aggressor, but the real performance is Washington disguising coercion as law. The facts expose a history of colonial cartography, militarized bases, and trade arteries patrolled by empire. Reframed through the eyes of the global proletariat, “freedom of navigation” is revealed as freedom of coercion. From fisherfolk flotillas to multipolar... Continue Reading →
Flag-Waving on Borrowed Bases: India, the Philippines, and the Choreography of Containment
Zee News performs propaganda, not journalism, staging war drills as patriotic spectacle. India and the Philippines are not asserting sovereignty—they are rehearsing U.S. war plans. This is not strategy—it is Sovereignty Theater managed by compradors under hyperimperial command. We must sabotage the logistics of empire and organize rupture, not reform.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information... Continue Reading →
Primitive Accumulation by Narcotic: The Opium Wars and the Forcible Integration of China into the World Market
How Britain’s opium gunboats shattered China’s agrarian order, dismembered its sovereignty, and inaugurated the long colonial century that revolution would one day buryBy Pablo Katari | Weaponized Information| July 26, 2025Exchange as Pretext, War as MechanismThe circulation of commodities requires peace; the expansion of capital requires war. In the case of China, this contradiction found... 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 →