TheStreet’s “IMF warning” is not neutral analysis but a piece of market propaganda that converts class power into spreadsheet logic and fear into investor common sense. Beneath the tech hype, the U.S. growth story is revealed as a fragile pyramid propped up by the Magnificent Seven, Nvidia’s monopoly rents, and a debt-financed AI buildout that... Continue Reading →
Reparations, Resistance, and the Ledger of Empire: Excavating the Guardian’s Colonial Amnesia
A Weaponized Propaganda Excavation of How Corporate Media Sanitizes Colonial Crimes, Buries Trillions in Stolen Wealth, and Obscures Africa’s Renewed Fight for Justice and Sovereignty By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | December 1, 2025 How the Guardian Turns Colonial Crimes into a “Debate” About Recognition The piece we’re excavating, “African leaders push for recognition... Continue Reading →
Lobito and the Long Arm of Empire: Europe’s Green Transition Runs on African Land, Labor, and Life
How the EU’s “model corridor” revives the colonial blueprint under the banner of sustainability— and how African workers, communities, and global movements are fighting back. By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | November 24, 2025 Europe’s Clean Hands Fantasy in the New Scramble for Africa The article under excavation, “In the new scramble for Africa’s... 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 →
Guyana at the Crossroads: Oil, Empire, and the Struggle for Sovereignty
How CNN launders Exxon’s contracts, Washington’s warships, and the new cold war into “stability” — and why Guyana is a chokepoint in the fight for a multipolar futureBy Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | September 3, 2025Oil, War, and the Consent Factory: Excavating CNN’s Guyana Frame The target under excavation is CNN’s “Oil, threat of... Continue Reading →
When Gold Glitters Too Loud: The Propaganda War Against African Monetary Sovereignty
Kitco’s reporting cloaks imperial fear in financial jargon while casting African strategy as recklessness. Our excavation exposes the gold rush for what it really is: a sovereign response to centuries of extraction. Gold accumulation and mine nationalization are steps toward regional counterpower, not economic suicide. Revolutionaries in the imperial core must act—where the vaults are... Continue Reading →
Uranium and the Unfinished Struggle: Excavating the Tanzanian-Russian Deal at Namtumbo
What lies beneath the ground—and the headlines—is a story of empire, extraction, and the contested terrain of multipolarity By Prince Kapone | Weaponized Information | August 1, 2025 Radioactive Friendship or Resource Grab? Unmasking the Tanzanian-Russian Uranium Deal On July 31st, The East African ran a brief article by Apolinari Tairo announcing the launch of... Continue Reading →
Kyrie Is Right, Gates Owns the Plantation: How Media Ridicule Protects Billionaire Land Theft
Kyrie Irving was mocked for questioning billionaire land and water control—but the laughter is propaganda. Corporate media exists to deflect attention from the privatization of essential resources by U.S. capital itself. Bill Gates’s farmland empire is a pillar of technofascist consolidation, not a harmless investment portfolio. We must defend proletarian intuition, expose capitalist enclosures, and... Continue Reading →
Markets of Empire: Manchester, Colonial Plunder, and the Arithmetic of Global Capitalism
From the cotton of Bengal to the sugar of Jamaica, the wealth of the City was not born of free exchange—but of forced extraction.By Prince Kapone | Weaponized InformationJuly 24, 2025The Architecture of CatharsisOn July 22, 2025, The Guardian published an article by Chris Osuh titled “Manchester’s Royal Exchange rooted in slavery and colonialism, research... Continue Reading →